Key Facts
The IPSA edged up 0.29% to 10,706 on June 25 — snapping a two-day slide.
A friendlier global mood did the lifting — softer US inflation eased rate worries and brightened risk appetite.
It rose even as copper fell — the mirror image of the prior session, when copper rose but the index dropped.
The peso held near 920 per dollar — roughly flat, a calm base for the gentle bounce.
Range-bound stabilising — momentum sits right at the midline, the index trading sideways.
Today’s Focus
Chile’s market steadied. The IPSA edged up 0.29% to 10,706 on June 25, recovering part of the prior two days’ losses — and the way it rose is the story.
The lift came from outside, not from Chile’s own commodities.
A softer US inflation reading eased worries about the path of interest rates and brightened risk appetite across Latin America, helping Chilean shares recover. The striking detail is that the index gained even as copper, its main export and usual driver, slipped on the day.
That is the exact mirror of the previous session, when a rising copper price could not stop the index from falling.
Put together, the two days show the same lesson from opposite sides: Chile’s market is being moved less by what it digs out of the ground than by the mood of global money.
What matters today. The bounce leaned on a friendlier external tone; copper and the dollar remain the swing factors that decide whether the steadying turns into something more.
01 The session in one read
The IPSA closed at 10,706, up 0.29% and about 31 points, after trading between roughly 10,625 and 10,778; it was a modest gain that snapped the two-day slide and lifted the index back onto the cluster of medium-term averages it had slipped below. After weeks of sideways trading, this was a quiet, stabilising session rather than a decisive turn.
The character of the move is what stands out. Copper, the metal that usually sets Chile’s direction, slipped on the day, yet the index rose — pointing the explanation toward the improved global mood, sparked by cooler US inflation, rather than anything in Chile’s own commodity complex.
With the peso roughly flat, the gentle bounce reads as imported strength, the flip side of the imported weakness that drove the prior session’s fall.
Assessment — Imported strength, copper aside HIGH
The dominant force was a friendlier global mood from softer US inflation, not local commodities — confirmed by a rising index on a day copper fell. With the peso flat, the read is range-bound stabilisation.
The variables to watch are copper and the dollar.
02 The day’s numbers
Measure
Level
Change
Read
IPSA close
10,706
+0.29%
A modest gain, snapping a two-day slide.
Session range
10,625–10,778
—
A narrow band — a quiet, stabilising session.
Currency (USD/CLP)
920
−0.10%
Peso roughly flat — a calm base for the bounce.
Copper
6.05
−0.38%
Slipped — yet the index rose anyway.
Momentum (daily)
~50
—
Right at the midline — consolidating.
Read together, the table captures the day’s quiet paradox. Copper fell, which would usually weigh on Chile, but the index still rose and the peso barely moved — proof the lift came from the global mood rather than the commodity that normally drives the market.
The currency change reflects the peso easing a touch as the dollar firmed.
Live Market IntelligenceChile — Live Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Chile — Live Market Board
Santiago
Jun 26, 2026 · 04:51
S&P IPSA · benchmark
10,706
+0.29%
L 10,625day rangeH 10,778
Market breadth · 11 names
73% advancing
8 ▲ advancing3 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / CLP
920.11
+0.10%
Copper
6.09
+0.40%
Sector heatmap · average move today
Consumer Disc.
+5.94%
FALABELLA
Financials
+1.78%
BSANTANDER, BANCO CHILE
Other
+1.04%
COPPER, SOUTHERN COPPER
Consumer Staples
+0.57%
CENCOSUD
Industrials
+0.04%
LATAM AIR
Utilities
-0.31%
ENELAM
Energy
-0.48%
COPEC
Materials
-1.56%
SQM-B, CMPC
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
171,990
+0.87%
S&P IPSAChile
10,706
+0.29%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,261.53
-0.42%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
54,833.60
-1.48%
Full instrument board
InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
IPSA
10,706
+0.29%
—
10,675
10,778
10,625
—
USD/CLP
920.11
+0.10%
-1.80%
919.15
920.11
920.11
—
COPPER
6.09
+0.40%
+20.31%
6.07
6.14
6.02
9,858
SQM-B
67,050
-3.53%
+108.96%
69,500
69,921
66,400
394,093
COPEC
5,802
-0.48%
—
5,830
5,890
5,795
770,708
BSANTANDER
73.50
+2.07%
—
72.01
74.17
72.19
207,306,129
FALABELLA
5,890
+5.94%
—
5,560
5,920
5,589
1,788,185
ENELAM
81.51
-0.31%
-8.83%
81.76
82.41
81.30
41,812,914
CENCOSUD
2,123
+0.57%
-33.76%
2,111
2,150
2,100
1,999,129
CMPC
1,040
+0.42%
-27.27%
1,036
1,060
1,029
1,799,894
BANCO CHILE
177.61
+1.48%
+28.80%
175.02
179.50
175.00
66,470,774
LATAM AIR
26.12
+0.04%
—
26.11
26.52
26.04
767,345,678
SOUTHERN COPPER
174.73
+1.68%
—
171.84
178.25
170.87
1,751,349
Largest moves today
FALABELLA
5,890
+5.94%
SQM-B
67,050
-3.53%
BSANTANDER
73.50
+2.07%
SOUTHERN COPPER
174.73
+1.68%
BANCO CHILE
177.61
+1.48%
CENCOSUD
2,123
+0.57%
COPEC
5,802
-0.48%
CMPC
1,040
+0.42%
The session read
The S&P IPSA rose 0.29%, with breadth positive — 8 of 11 names higher. Consumer Disc. led, while Materials lagged.
03 Why it moved — a friendlier global mood lifts Chile
The single most diagnostic fact is that the IPSA rose while copper fell. Because Chile’s market usually takes its cue from the red metal, a gain on a day copper slipped points the explanation away from commodities and toward the broader mood.
That mood improved sharply: a softer US inflation reading eased worries about the path of interest rates, brightened appetite for risk, and lifted markets across Latin America, with Mexico and Brazil leading the region higher. Chile rode that current, recovering part of the ground it had lost over the prior two sessions.
The contrast with the day before is the clearest way to read it. On June 24, a rising copper price could not stop the IPSA from falling, because a weaker peso and global outflows dominated — imported weakness.
On June 25, a falling copper price could not stop it from rising, because a friendlier global tone dominated — imported strength. Both sessions point to the same truth: with the peso steady and local fundamentals little changed, Chile’s market is currently dancing to the rhythm of global sentiment rather than its own commodities.
04 The day’s movers
Driver
Level / Move
Change
Note
IPSA
10,706
+0.29%
A gentle rebound on the global mood.
Peso (USD/CLP)
920
−0.10%
Roughly flat — a calm, neutral base.
Copper
6.05
−0.38%
Slipped — the usual engine, sidelined again.
Lithium
78.45
−0.58%
Also softer — local commodities did not drive the gain.
The story within the story is the role reversal. A day earlier, rising metals could not lift the index; this time, falling metals could not sink it.
With copper and lithium both easing yet the market higher, the session belonged entirely to the external mood — a reminder that Chile’s index can move on the world’s risk appetite as much as on its own exports.
05 The regional scoreboard
Index
Country
Change
IPC
Mexico
+1.72%
Ibovespa
Brazil
+0.87%
IPSA
Chile
+0.29%
Colcap
Colombia
−0.42%
Merval
Argentina
−0.46%
The region mostly turned higher, a reversal from the prior day’s broad selloff. Mexico led on a friendlier inflation backdrop and Brazil rose on a soft inflation reading, with Chile’s gentler gain fitting the same pattern, while Colombia and Argentina eased slightly as they digested their own stories.
Cooler US inflation set the friendlier tone across the region, and Chile’s modest advance was its share of that improved mood.
06 The technical picture
Momentum is neutral. The daily gauge sits right at the midline near 50, neither stretched nor washed out, the profile of a market consolidating within a range.
The shorter-term trend measure has ticked up modestly, consistent with a market steadying after a two-day dip rather than breaking decisively in either direction.
The levels frame the next move. The index is trading on the cluster of medium-term averages around 10,650 to 10,820; clearing the upper end would signal renewed momentum, while slipping back below would return it toward the recent lows. The rising long-term trend line, well below current levels, remains the floor that underpins the broader uptrend, and the record near 11,720 marks how far the year’s pullback has run. Copper and the dollar are the variables most likely to decide the direction from here.
07 What to watch
Copper: the usual engine, which slipped this session; a firmer price would give Chile a foundation to extend the bounce on its own merits.
The global risk mood: the force that lifted Chile this time — whether the friendlier tone from cooler US inflation holds.
The peso near 920: whether the currency stays steady, the calm base the gentle rebound leaned on.
The 10,820 resistance: the upper edge of the medium-term averages the index must clear to signal renewed momentum.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Chile’s IPSA rise on June 25, 2026?
The IPSA edged up 0.29% to 10,706, snapping a two-day slide, lifted by a friendlier global mood rather than its own commodities. A softer US inflation reading eased worries about the path of interest rates and brightened risk appetite across the region, helping Chilean shares recover.
The notable twist is that the index rose even though copper, its main export and usual driver, slipped on the day — the mirror image of the prior session, when copper rose but the market fell. This time, the improved external tone did the lifting.
Why did the index rise when copper fell?
Because the day’s driver was global sentiment, not metals. Copper eased and lithium softened, a backdrop that would normally weigh on Chilean shares, yet the index still gained — a sign that an improving risk mood abroad, sparked by cooler US inflation, outweighed the commodity drag.
It is the flip side of the previous session: where June 24 saw rising copper fail to stop a fall driven by a weaker peso and outflows, June 25 saw softer copper fail to stop a rise driven by a friendlier global tone. Chile’s market answers to both forces.
Has the Chilean market been overvalued?
No — it has been trading sideways near the middle of its range for weeks rather than climbing to extremes. Momentum sits right at the midline, neither stretched nor washed out, the profile of a market consolidating.
The modest gain simply recovered part of the prior two days’ losses, leaving the index within its established band and a few percent below the record it set earlier in the year. This reads as range-bound stabilisation, not a stretched rally.
What levels should investors watch next?
The medium-term averages around 10,650 to 10,820, where the index is now trading, are the immediate zone; clearing the upper end would signal renewed momentum. The rising long-term trend line, well below current levels, remains the floor that underpins the broader uptrend, and the record near 11,720 marks how far the year’s pullback has run.
Copper and the dollar remain the key swing factors: a firmer copper price or a steady currency would give Chile a foundation to extend the bounce.
How did the rest of Latin America trade?
The region mostly turned higher, a reversal from the prior day’s selloff. Mexico’s IPC jumped more than 1.5% on a friendlier inflation backdrop, Brazil’s Ibovespa rose on a soft inflation reading, and Chile’s IPSA edged up, while Colombia and Argentina eased only slightly as they digested their own stories. Cooler US inflation set a friendlier tone across the region, and Chile’s gain fit that pattern — a market lifted by the improved global mood even as its own commodities softened.
Connected Coverage
This report continues The Rio Times’ daily coverage of Chile’s market: see the prior session, Chile’s IPSA Falls a Second Day — Even as Copper Rises, a Weaker Peso Wins. For the wider regional picture on a day the region turned higher, see the Global Economy Briefing, and for how the same soft-inflation backdrop lifted other markets, our companion Brazil, Mexico and crypto reports. Together they show one friendly current — cooling inflation — steadying markets across the region at once.
Reported by Richard Mann for The Rio Times — Latin American financial news. Filed June 26, 2026, covering the June 25 session.
Index, currency and single-stock levels are session-close readings via the Rio Times market data feed (Santiago Exchange and regional exchanges); technical readings are from the daily chart. Figures are point-in-time and not investment advice.
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