Markets · Analysis
Key Facts
A global rotation. As Asia’s chipmakers crashed for a second time in a week, money fled expensive technology for cheaper, steadier shares.
Latin America benefits. The region is full of exactly what nervous money wants now — cheap banks, miners and energy firms.
Brazil set a record. The Ibovespa closed Friday at an all-time high of 173,295, up 0.76%, with Colombia, Argentina and Chile also higher.
Mexico drew a line. Banxico held its rate at 6.50% and declared its easing cycle over after inflation cooled to 3.55%.
The risk. A firmer US dollar or a hawkish Federal Reserve could reverse the flows as fast as they arrived.
*Global investors are rotating out of expensive technology stocks and into Latin America’s cheap banks, miners and energy firms, driving Brazil’s Ibovespa to a record and lifting markets across the region — a move that could reverse if the US dollar strengthens.*
For once, being the slow, cheap corner of the markets paid off. As the world’s hottest trade — artificial intelligence and the chips behind it — cracked for a second time in a week, global money went looking for somewhere steadier, and a surprising amount of it landed in Latin America.
The great rotation
A hot US inflation reading revived fears that interest rates will stay high for longer, and the crowded artificial-intelligence trade buckled under the pressure. Korea’s KOSPI fell 6.85% and Apple dropped 6.12%, and investors pulled money out of expensive technology and moved it toward cheaper, dividend-paying shares.
That money has to go somewhere, and increasingly it is flowing to emerging markets that were left behind during the technology boom. Latin America, long dismissed as too slow and too cheap, suddenly looked like a feature rather than a flaw.
Live Market IntelligenceBrazil — Live Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Brazil — Live Market Board
B3 · São Paulo
Jun 27, 2026 · 04:43
Ibovespa · benchmark
173,295
+0.76%
L 171,124day rangeH 173,964
+26.39% over 12 months
Market breadth · 15 names
53% advancing
8 ▲ advancing7 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / BRL
5.17
-0.14%
EUR / BRL
5.88
-0.38%
Selic rate
14.25%
·
Brent crude
72.60
-3.53%
Iron ore
161.91
·
Sector heatmap · average move today
Utilities
+2.64%
ENEV3
Consumer Staples
+2.07%
ABEV3
Financials
+1.64%
ITUB4, BBDC4, BBAS3, B3SA3
Industrials
+1.32%
WEGE3, RENT3
Mining
-0.87%
VALE3, CSNA3, GGBR4
Energy
-1.11%
PETR4, PRIO3
Consumer Disc.
-4.09%
AZZA3
Materials
-4.50%
SUZB3
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
Instrument
Last
Change
YoY
Prev.
High
Low
Volume
IBOV
173,295
+0.76%
+26.39%
171,990
173,964
171,124
—
USD/BRL
5.17
-0.14%
-6.97%
5.18
5.19
5.16
—
SELIC
14.25%
—
—
—
—
—
PETR4
38.06
-1.01%
+20.98%
38.45
38.25
37.93
23,287,800
VALE3
78.15
-0.65%
+50.29%
78.66
78.88
77.91
25,247,600
ITUB4
42.24
+1.30%
+19.82%
41.70
42.54
41.40
23,049,300
BBDC4
17.92
+1.70%
+8.28%
17.62
18.10
17.48
54,796,900
BBAS3
20.34
+1.45%
-5.83%
20.05
20.45
19.97
18,066,600
B3SA3
14.92
+2.12%
+5.82%
14.61
15.05
14.40
58,172,900
ABEV3
16.73
+2.07%
+25.60%
16.39
16.76
16.38
21,675,900
WEGE3
46.90
+0.86%
+8.89%
46.50
47.32
46.18
6,009,700
PRIO3
53.29
-1.21%
+27.34%
53.94
53.62
52.81
5,870,500
SUZB3
40.11
-4.50%
-22.28%
42.00
41.85
39.75
11,618,700
RENT3
43.10
+1.77%
+7.72%
42.35
43.49
41.78
6,984,300
AZZA3
18.99
-4.09%
-53.48%
19.80
19.80
18.63
2,269,000
CSNA3
4.73
-1.87%
-36.25%
4.82
4.87
4.73
13,148,200
GGBR4
21.42
-0.09%
+33.37%
21.44
21.54
21.16
9,544,000
ENEV3
26.81
+2.64%
+97.42%
26.12
27.00
26.00
12,389,100
Largest moves today
SUZB3
40.11
-4.50%
AZZA3
18.99
-4.09%
ENEV3
26.81
+2.64%
B3SA3
14.92
+2.12%
ABEV3
16.73
+2.07%
CSNA3
4.73
-1.87%
RENT3
43.10
+1.77%
BBDC4
17.92
+1.70%
The session read
The Ibovespa rose 0.76%, with breadth positive — 8 of 15 names higher. Utilities led, while Materials lagged.
From The Rio Times
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Why Latin America, of all places
The region is heavy in precisely the businesses that do well when the technology trade fades: big banks that earn more while interest rates stay high, miners that gain when metals firm, and energy producers tied to oil. It holds very little of the loss-making technology that led the global sell-off.
Cheap valuations do the rest, because years of underperformance left Latin American shares inexpensive next to their US and Asian peers. When the world’s investors go hunting for value, that cheapness is the whole point.
Brazil and Mexico lead the way
Brazil’s Ibovespa closed Friday at a record 173,295, up 0.76%, led by its banks and the miner Vale, while the real held near 5.18 per dollar. A softer June inflation reading has even firmed bets on another interest-rate cut, a rare case of good news at home arriving alongside good news from abroad.
Mexico added its own signal when its central bank, Banxico, held its key rate at 6.50% and declared a two-year easing cycle over after inflation cooled to 3.55%. The clarity reassured investors even as the IPC dipped slightly, and Colombia, Argentina and Chile all ended the week higher.
What could break it
The same force lifting the region could just as easily flip it. If US inflation runs hotter and the Federal Reserve signals higher rates, the dollar would strengthen, and a strong dollar tends to pull money straight back out of emerging markets.
Home-grown risks matter too, from Brazil’s sharpening clash with Congress over a financial-transactions tax now before its Supreme Court to a tense presidential handover in Colombia. The rotation is real, but it rests on conditions that can change in a hurry.
What it means for foreign readers
For an investor watching from abroad, the lesson is that Latin America is behaving as a classic value play, rising not on hype but on what the rest of the world is selling. That makes it a useful counterweight when technology wobbles, rather than a bet on the next big thing.
For anyone living in the region, the immediate effect is a brighter local mood and, in Brazil’s case, a firmer currency. None of it changes daily life directly, but it shapes the backdrop of interest rates, inflation and confidence that everyone feels eventually.
What to watch next
Marker
When
Why it matters
US inflation & the dollar
Ongoing
The single biggest switch that could reverse the flows
The Federal Reserve
Its next meeting
A hawkish turn would pressure emerging markets
Brazil’s IOF tax fight
In the courts
Tests how far politics can dent the record run
Argentina’s ‘Súper RIGI’
In the Senate
A signal of how open the region is to investment
None of this guarantees the run continues, but it frames the question every global investor is now asking: how long can the boring corner keep winning?
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are Latin American markets rising while technology stocks fall?
Because global investors are rotating out of expensive, crowded technology and into cheaper, steadier shares. Latin America is full of the banks, miners and energy firms that benefit from that switch, so money leaving Seoul and Silicon Valley has been finding its way to São Paulo and Bogotá.
Which countries are benefiting most?
Brazil and Mexico are the standouts. Brazil’s Ibovespa set a record on the strength of its banks and miners, and Mexico’s market steadied after its central bank signalled a clear, predictable path, while Colombia, Argentina and Chile also closed the week higher.
Is the rally likely to last?
It can persist as long as the global rotation continues and the US dollar stays calm. But it is a flow-driven move rather than a structural boom, so it depends on outside conditions more than on any single Latin American policy.
What would reverse it?
A stronger US dollar is the main threat, usually triggered by hotter US inflation or a more hawkish Federal Reserve. A strong dollar tends to pull money back out of emerging markets quickly, and domestic political fights could add friction.
How should a foreign reader think about this?
Treat it as Latin America playing the role of a value hedge, rising on what the world is selling rather than on local hype. It is a useful counterweight when technology wobbles, but it carries the usual emerging-market risk if global conditions turn.
View original source — Rio Times ↗

