Key Facts
Colombia’s stock market closed up 1.09% at 2,286 on June 26 — clawing back part of its post-election slide.
The political overhang lifted — the electoral authority confirmed de la Espriella’s win and his rival conceded, ending the contested-transition uncertainty.
The index closed near the day’s high — a constructive finish after a punishing week.
Falling oil was a headwind — Brent dropped about 4%, a drag for heavyweight Ecopetrol.
Resistance sits just overhead near 2,300 — the averages the index fell through on the way down.
Today’s Focus
Colombia’s stock market steadied and turned higher. The benchmark index rose 1.09% to 2,286, a recovery that clawed back part of the steep selloff that followed the June 21 presidential runoff.
The cloud over the market has lifted. The electoral authority confirmed the narrow win of market-friendly president-elect Abelardo de la Espriella, and his rival conceded, ending the contested-transition uncertainty that had hammered Colombian shares for several sessions.
With that overhang gone, investors began buying back into an oversold market.
The recovery had to fight a headwind, though. A sharp drop in oil weighed on Ecopetrol, Colombia’s largest and most heavily weighted company, capping the bounce even as the broader market healed.
What matters today. With the election finally settled, attention shifts from politics back to fundamentals — oil prices, the peso and the new government’s cabinet and fiscal plans will set the tone from here.
01 The session in one read
Colombia’s main stock index, the COLCAP, closed at 2,286, up 1.09% and about 25 points, after trading between roughly 2,256 and 2,296; it finished near the top of the day’s range, a constructive close after a punishing week. The gain clawed back a slice of the slide that had carried the market down from its pre-runoff record near 2,503.
The driver was relief. The contested election that drove the selloff is now resolved — the winner confirmed, the loser conceded — and with the political risk fading, buyers stepped back into a market that had fallen hard and fast.
The recovery was not clean, however. A sharp drop in oil pressured Ecopetrol, the index’s heaviest stock, which kept the bounce in check and left the advance leaning on the broader market rather than its usual energy engine.
Assessment — A relief rebound, oil-capped MEDIUM
The bounce is well-founded: the political uncertainty that drove the selloff has resolved, and the index closed near its high after clawing back part of a steep drop. That is the shape of a market finding a floor.
What tempers it is oil — a sharp fall in crude is a direct headwind for heavyweight Ecopetrol, and the recovery still has to clear the averages just overhead near 2,300 to prove it is more than a bounce.
The variables to watch are oil and the peso.
02 The day’s numbers
Measure
Level
Change
Read
Index close
2,286
+1.09%
Clawed back part of the post-runoff slide; closed near the day’s high.
Session range
2,256–2,296
—
Finished in the upper part of the range.
Currency (USD/COP)
—
—
See the live market board below for the current USD/COP level.
Momentum (daily)
~50
—
Recovered to neutral from the selloff lows.
Key level
~2,300
—
The band of averages the index must reclaim to confirm the turn.
Read together, the table describes a market finding its footing. The gain is solid, the close sits near the top of the range, and momentum has recovered to neutral rather than stretching to an extreme.
The one missing read is the currency: without a peso quote this session, the table leaves USD/COP to the live board. Nothing in the price action looks overheated — it reads as a recovery still testing its ceiling.
Live Market IntelligenceColombia — Live Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Colombia — Live Market Board
BVC · Bogotá
Jun 27, 2026 · 04:34
MSCI COLCAP · benchmark
2,286.19
+1.09%
L 9.02day rangeH 9.05
Market breadth · 9 names
44% advancing
4 ▲ advancing5 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / COP
3,437
-0.16%
Brent crude
72.60
-3.53%
WTI crude
69.23
-3.74%
Sector heatmap · average move today
Energy
+1.87%
ECOPETROL
Industrials
+1.54%
TECNOGLASS
Financials
+0.35%
BANCOLOMBIA, GRUPO AVAL, CREDICORP
Mining
-0.85%
BUENAVENTURA
Other
-3.09%
BRENT, WTI, SOUTHERN COPPER
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
173,295
+0.76%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
67,226
-0.28%
S&P IPSAChile
10,763
+0.53%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,123,411
+0.88%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,286.19
+1.09%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
55,499.07
+1.21%
Full instrument board
InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
COLCAP
2,286.19
+1.09%
—
9.04
9.05
9.02
4,133
USD/COP
3,437
-0.16%
-15.26%
3,443
3,457
3,421
—
BRENT
72.60
-3.53%
+7.13%
75.26
75.46
71.95
40,760
WTI
69.23
-3.74%
+5.66%
71.92
71.86
68.56
222,826
ECOPETROL
14.72
+1.87%
+64.84%
14.45
14.82
14.21
3,080,540
BANCOLOMBIA
79.27
+0.48%
+75.80%
78.89
79.99
78.49
299,374
GRUPO AVAL
5.08
-0.39%
+80.78%
5.10
5.20
5.00
141,393
TECNOGLASS
44.75
+1.54%
-42.55%
44.07
45.84
44.49
821,133
CREDICORP
384.10
+0.97%
+71.55%
380.41
391.21
380.01
274,574
BUENAVENTURA
30.42
-0.85%
+88.36%
30.68
31.84
30.15
756,933
SOUTHERN COPPER
171.26
-1.99%
+73.16%
174.73
177.55
170.10
1,626,423
Largest moves today
WTI
69.23
-3.74%
BRENT
72.60
-3.53%
SOUTHERN COPPER
171.26
-1.99%
ECOPETROL
14.72
+1.87%
TECNOGLASS
44.75
+1.54%
COLCAP
2,286.19
+1.09%
CREDICORP
384.10
+0.97%
BUENAVENTURA
30.42
-0.85%
The session read
The MSCI COLCAP rose 1.09%, with breadth negative — 4 of 9 names higher. Energy led, while Other lagged.
03 Why it moved — the election cloud lifts
The single most important force was the end of political uncertainty. Colombia’s June 21 presidential runoff was decided by less than a percentage point, and for days the result was contested, with the losing side demanding a full recount and the outgoing president alleging fraud.
That uncertainty drove a steep, multi-day selloff in Colombian shares. By this week the electoral authority had confirmed the narrow victory of Abelardo de la Espriella, and his rival conceded — removing the overhang and letting an oversold market recover.
The president-elect is, on balance, one investors read as market-friendly. He has pledged to rein in public spending, lower taxes, and revive oil exploration and the state oil company Ecopetrol.
With the contest settled, that pro-business framing supports a steadier tone for Colombian assets, even if the hard work of governing — and building legislative support for an ambitious agenda — still lies ahead.
The recovery had to lean against oil. Brent crude fell about 4% as global supply fears eased, a direct headwind for Ecopetrol, the index’s single most important stock.
That the market rose anyway points to a broad relief bid across the rest of it — financials, utilities and consumer names — outweighing the drag from energy.
04 The day’s movers
Driver
Level / Move
Change
Note
Index
2,286
+1.09%
A broad relief rebound; closed near the day’s high.
Ecopetrol
Headwind
—
Pressured by a roughly 4% fall in Brent crude; the index’s heaviest stock.
Financials & broader market
Higher
+
Recovered as political risk faded, carrying the index.
Peso (USD/COP)
—
—
See the live market board below.
The story within the session is the hand-off. With the political risk fading, the broad market did the lifting while the index’s usual energy engine, Ecopetrol, was held back by falling oil.
That is an unusual configuration for Colombia, where crude and Ecopetrol normally lead in both directions — and a reminder that this was a relief rebound, not an oil-driven one.
05 The regional scoreboard
Index
Country
Change
Colcap
Colombia
+1.09%
Ibovespa
Brazil
+0.76%
IPC
Mexico
—
IPSA
Chile
—
Merval
Argentina
—
Colombia was among the region’s brighter spots, recovering as its election risk cleared, while Brazil extended its own rate-driven advance. The rest of the regional board is carried on the live market pack above, with a sharp drop in oil the common cross-current weighing on the energy-linked markets.
06 The technical picture
Momentum has recovered to neutral. The daily gauge has climbed back to about 50 from the lows of the selloff — the profile of a market stabilizing rather than resuming its fall.
The shape of the session was constructive, too. The index closed near the top of its daily range, and the recent candles have turned higher, an early sign the steep downtrend is losing its force.
The levels frame the test ahead. Just overhead sits the band of averages around 2,300 that the index fell through on the way down; reclaiming it would confirm the turn.
Below, support runs toward 2,230 and then the long-term rising line near 2,150, while the pre-runoff record near 2,503 marks how far the index has fallen and how much ground a full recovery would need to retrace.
07 What to watch
Oil and Ecopetrol: crude’s direction is the biggest day-to-day swing factor for the energy-heavy index.
The 2,300 ceiling: the averages the index must reclaim to confirm the rebound is a turn, not a bounce.
The peso: whether the currency firms now that election risk has cleared, a steadying base for shares.
The new government: cabinet picks and fiscal plans from the president-elect, the next real test of the market-friendly read.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Colombia’s stock market rise on June 26, 2026?
The index climbed 1.09% to 2,286 as the political uncertainty that had driven a steep selloff finally lifted. Colombia’s June 21 presidential runoff was decided by less than a point and the result was contested for days, but the electoral authority confirmed the narrow win of market-friendly president-elect Abelardo de la Espriella and his rival conceded.
With that overhang gone, buyers stepped back into an oversold market, even as a sharp drop in oil weighed on heavyweight Ecopetrol.
What had driven the recent selloff?
Colombian shares fell hard for several sessions after the June 21 runoff. The race was decided by under one percentage point, the losing side demanded a recount, and the outgoing president alleged irregularities — a contested transition that injected political risk and erased most of the powerful rally that had carried the market to records before the vote.
Who is the president-elect, and why do markets care?
Abelardo de la Espriella, a right-leaning lawyer and political outsider, narrowly won the runoff and takes office on August 7. Investors generally read him as market-friendly because he has pledged to cut public spending, lower taxes, and revive oil exploration and the state oil company Ecopetrol.
The reaction from here will hinge on his cabinet picks and his ability to build support for that agenda.
Why did falling oil hold the rebound back?
Ecopetrol is Colombia’s largest company and the most heavily weighted stock in the index, so crude prices are a major day-to-day swing factor. Brent fell about 4% on the day, a direct headwind for Ecopetrol that capped the recovery — meaning the gain came from a broad relief bid across the rest of the market rather than from its usual energy engine.
What levels should investors watch next?
Just overhead sits the band of averages near 2,300 that the index fell through during the selloff; reclaiming it would confirm the rebound is a genuine turn. On the downside, support runs toward 2,230 and then the long-term rising line near 2,150.
The pre-runoff record near 2,503 marks how far the index has fallen and how much ground a full recovery would need to make up.
Connected Coverage
This report continues The Rio Times’ daily coverage of Colombia’s market: see the prior session, Colombia’s Stock Market Steadies as the Election Storm Clears, and the reversal that began the slide in Colombia’s Stock Market Plunges After a Thin Election Win. For the wider regional picture, see the Global Economy Briefing, and our companion Brazil, gold, silver and crypto reports.
Reported by Richard Mann for The Rio Times — Latin American financial news. Filed June 27, 2026, covering the June 26 session.
Index, currency and single-stock levels are session-close readings via the Rio Times market data feed (BVC and regional exchanges); technical readings are from the daily chart. Figures are point-in-time and not investment advice.
The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map →
View original source — Rio Times ↗

