IBOV
173,295
▲ 0.76%
IPSA
10,762
▲ 0.52%
IPC MEX
67,226
▼ 0.28%
MERVAL
3,123,411
▲ 0.88%
COLCAP
2,286.19
▲ 1.09%
BVL PERÚ
55,499.07
▲ 1.21%
USD/BRL5.17▼ 0.03%
USD/MXN17.50▼ 0.08%
USD/CLP921.85▼ 0.11%
USD/COP3,437— 0.00%
USD/PEN3.41▼ 0.46%
USD/ARS1,477▼ 0.03%
USD/UYU40.22▲ 1.83%
USD/PYG6,084▲ 1.72%
USD/BOB6.85▲ 1.98%
USD/DOP59.28▲ 2.07%
USD/CRC450.59▲ 2.01%
USD/GTQ7.62▲ 2.54%
USD/HNL26.70▲ 0.40%
USD/NIO
36.62
— 0.00%
USD/VES620.66▲ 5.79%
USD/PAB1.00— 0.00%
USD/BZD2.00— 0.00%
USD/JMD156.65▲ 0.65%
USD/TTD6.74▲ 1.49%
EUR/BRL5.88▼ 0.38%
BRENT
72.60
▼ 3.53%
WTI
69.23
▼ 3.74%
IRON ORE
161.91
— —
COPPER
6.21
▲ 2.25%
GOLD
4,096
▲ 1.63%
SILVER
59.67
▲ 2.27%
SOY
1,156
▲ 2.55%
CORN
421.75
▲ 1.69%
WHEAT
589.75
▼ 0.21%
COFFEE
261.25
▼ 9.54%
SUGAR
14.55
▲ 7.38%
ORANGE JUICE
148.60
▲ 11.44%
COTTON
76.78
▲ 4.60%
COCOA
5,217
▲ 1.12%
BEEF
245.83
▼ 4.50%
CATTLE
369.85
▼ 0.92%
LITHIUM
75.93
▼ 3.21%
PETR4
38.06
▼ 1.01%
VALE3
78.15
▼ 0.65%
ITUB4
42.24
▲ 1.30%
BBDC4
17.92
▲ 1.70%
ABEV3
16.73
▲ 2.07%
BBAS3
20.34
▲ 1.45%
B3SA3
14.92
▲ 2.12%
WEGE3
46.90
▲ 0.86%
PRIO3
53.29
▼ 1.21%
SUZB3
40.11
▼ 4.50%
RENT3
43.10
▲ 1.77%
AZZA3
18.99
▼ 4.09%
CSAN3
3.76
▲ 1.35%
RAIZ4
0.41
▼ 2.38%
PCAR3
2.28
▲ 0.89%
GMAT3
3.87
▲ 1.04%
PSSA3
53.26
▲ 1.25%
CVCB3
1.41
▼ 0.70%
POSI3
3.99
▲ 1.53%
SLCE3
13.17
▼ 0.98%
NATU3
7.98
▲ 2.05%
BRKM5
6.25
▼ 8.36%
RANI3
7.80
▲ 0.39%
CSNA3
4.73
▼ 1.87%
CMIN3
4.25
▲ 0.24%
USIM5
8.27
▼ 2.71%
GGBR4
21.42
▼ 0.09%
ENEV3
26.81
▲ 2.64%
NEOE3
33.80
— 0.00%
CPFE3
45.50
▲ 0.84%
CMIG4
10.96
▲ 1.58%
EQTL3
39.75
▲ 1.79%
LREN3
14.97
▲ 3.10%
VIVT3
34.79
▲ 0.64%
RAIL3
13.69
▲ 1.78%
KLABIN
16.96
▼ 0.53%
RAIA DROGASIL
17.35
▲ 0.87%
RDOR3
34.71
▲ 1.00%
HAPV3
10.24
▲ 1.19%
FLRY3
15.61
▲ 1.04%
SMTO3
15.04
▲ 2.24%
UGPA3
25.60
▲ 1.39%
VBBR3
29.69
▲ 1.78%
BBSE3
39.17
▲ 0.77%
BPAC11
54.66
▲ 0.66%
CURY3
35.11
▲ 1.15%
AERI3
2.08
▲ 0.48%
VIVARA
23.54
▲ 1.99%
COMPASS
24.94
▼ 2.35%
VAMOS
2.88
▲ 2.13%
SANB11
26.35
▲ 0.57%
ASAI3
8.83
▲ 2.56%
SBSP3
29.60
▲ 2.42%
WALMEX
50.86
▼ 0.51%
GMEXICO
200.00
▼ 1.48%
FEMSA
225.20
▲ 2.85%
CEMEX
21.51
▼ 0.97%
GFNORTE
182.90
▼ 1.59%
BIMBO
57.09
▲ 1.66%
TELEVISA
9.48
▼ 1.46%
AMX
23.20
▲ 0.74%
GAP
441.57
▼ 0.06%
ASUR
308.43
▼ 0.38%
OMA
245.60
▲ 0.65%
KOF
186.96
▲ 1.29%
GRUMA
283.22
▲ 0.17%
KIMBER
38.85
▲ 1.68%
SQM-B
65,950
▼ 1.64%
COPEC
5,765
▼ 0.64%
BSANTANDER
75.00
▲ 2.04%
FALABELLA
5,911
▲ 0.36%
ENELAM
82.00
▲ 0.60%
CENCOSUD
2,127
▲ 0.19%
CMPC
1,040
— 0.00%
BANCO CHILE
177.80
▲ 0.11%
LATAM AIR
26.97
▲ 3.25%
YPF
70,050
▼ 0.99%
GGAL
7,715
▲ 1.45%
PAMPA
4,973
▲ 0.25%
TXAR
682.50
▲ 1.49%
ALUAR
991.00
▲ 0.10%
TGS
9,225
▲ 1.15%
CEPU
2,274
▲ 2.29%
MIRGOR
16,075
▲ 0.16%
COME
41.38
▲ 0.88%
LOMA NEGRA
3,555
▲ 0.21%
BYMA
307.75
▲ 2.16%
TELECOM ARG
3,958
▲ 0.19%
ECOPETROL
14.72
▲ 1.87%
BANCOLOMBIA
79.27
▲ 0.48%
GRUPO AVAL
5.08
▼ 0.39%
CREDICORP
384.10
▲ 0.97%
SOUTHERN COPPER
171.26
▼ 1.99%
BUENAVENTURA
30.42
▼ 0.85%
MERCADOLIBRE
1,675
▲ 3.45%
NUBANK
13.17
▲ 5.70%
XP
16.13
▲ 2.22%
PAGSEGURO
9.07
▲ 3.78%
STONE
10.99
▲ 1.85%
GLOBANT
30.03
▲ 8.29%
TECNOGLASS
44.75
▲ 1.54%
GAP AIRPORT
252.48
▲ 0.11%
ASUR
308.43
▼ 0.38%
OMA AIRPORT
111.99
▼ 0.02%
AMX ADR
26.41
▲ 0.42%
FEMSA ADR
128.87
▲ 2.79%
CEMEX ADR
12.28
▼ 0.81%
PETROBRAS ADR
16.29
▼ 1.39%
VALE ADR
15.07
▼ 0.33%
ITAU ADR
8.23
▲ 2.49%
SANTANDER BR
5.20
▲ 0.78%
AMBEV ADR
3.23
▲ 2.87%
CSN
0.94
▼ 1.91%
GERDAU
4.15
▲ 0.24%
LATAM ADR
58.63
▲ 3.03%
BTC
59,591
▼ 0.58%
ETH
1,572
▲ 0.03%
SOL
71.42
▲ 1.43%
XRP
1.05
▼ 0.08%
BNB
551.28
▼ 0.92%
ADA
0.14
▼ 1.17%
DOGE
0.07
▼ 1.76%
AVAX
6.33
▼ 1.48%
LINK
7.25
▼ 0.49%
DOT
0.81
▼ 0.85%
LTC
42.92
▲ 1.87%
BCH
190.72
▼ 2.38%
TRX
0.32
▲ 0.61%
XLM
0.17
▼ 2.18%
HBAR
0.07
▼ 1.45%
NEAR
1.83
▼ 2.28%
ATOM
1.57
▲ 0.13%
AAVE
89.97
▼ 4.19%
SELIC
14.25%
—
EMBRAER
81.90
▲ 0.99%
EMBRAER ADR
63.75
▲ 1.51%
JBS
12.22
▲ 1.58%
JBS BDR
62.67
▲ 0.87%
MBRF3
17.10
▲ 2.70%
MBRFY
3.25
— 0.00%
INTER
5.44
▲ 3.82%
EGX
50,344
▼ 2.64%
USD/ZAR16.41▼ 0.09%
USD/NGN1,378▲ 0.08%
NIKKEI
69,361
▼ 4.15%
CSI300
4,868
▼ 3.03%
HSI
22,672
▼ 1.76%
NIFTY
24,056
▲ 0.14%
KOSPI
8,411
▼ 5.81%
JCI
5,896
▼ 1.72%
USD/JPY161.69▼ 0.04%
USD/CNY6.80▼ 0.01%
DAX
24,671
▼ 1.29%
CAC
8,385
▼ 0.55%
FTSE
10,508
▼ 0.21%
MIB
51,265
▼ 1.00%
IBEX
19,425
▼ 0.45%
STOXX
635.88
▼ 0.68%
EUR/USD1.14▲ 0.18%
GBP/USD1.32▲ 0.24%
SPX
7,354
▼ 0.05%
DJI
51,876
▼ 0.09%
NDX
29,118
▼ 1.09%
RUT
3,010
▲ 0.07%
TSX
34,980
▲ 0.37%
VIX
18.41
▼ 2.54%
USD/CAD1.42▼ 0.01%
US10Y
4.3720
▼ 0.46%
IBOV
173,295
▲ 0.76%
IPSA
10,762
▲ 0.52%
IPC MEX
67,226
▼ 0.28%
MERVAL
3,123,411
▲ 0.88%
COLCAP
2,286.19
▲ 1.09%
BVL PERÚ
55,499.07
▲ 1.21%
USD/BRL
5.17
▼ 0.03%
USD/MXN
17.50
▼ 0.08%
USD/CLP
921.85
▼ 0.11%
USD/COP
3,437
▼ 0.00%
USD/PEN
3.41
▼ 0.46%
USD/ARS
1,477
▼ 0.03%
USD/UYU
40.22
▲ 1.83%
USD/PYG
6,084
▲ 1.72%
USD/BOB
6.85
▲ 1.98%
USD/DOP
59.28
▲ 2.07%
USD/CRC
450.59
▲ 2.01%
USD/GTQ
7.62
▲ 2.54%
USD/HNL
26.70
▲ 0.40%
USD/NIO
36.62
— 0.00%
USD/VES
620.66
▲ 5.79%
USD/PAB
1.00
— 0.00%
USD/BZD
2.00
— 0.00%
USD/JMD
156.65
▲ 0.65%
USD/TTD
6.74
▲ 1.49%
EUR/BRL
5.88
▼ 0.38%
BRENT
72.60
▼ 3.53%
WTI
69.23
▼ 3.74%
IRON ORE
161.91
— —
COPPER
6.21
▲ 2.25%
GOLD
4,096
▲ 1.63%
SILVER
59.67
▲ 2.27%
SOY
1,156
▲ 2.55%
CORN
421.75
▲ 1.69%
WHEAT
589.75
▼ 0.21%
COFFEE
261.25
▼ 9.54%
SUGAR
14.55
▲ 7.38%
ORANGE JUICE
148.60
▲ 11.44%
COTTON
76.78
▲ 4.60%
COCOA
5,217
▲ 1.12%
BEEF
245.83
▼ 4.50%
CATTLE
369.85
▼ 0.92%
LITHIUM
75.93
▼ 3.21%
PETR4
38.06
▼ 1.01%
VALE3
78.15
▼ 0.65%
ITUB4
42.24
▲ 1.30%
BBDC4
17.92
▲ 1.70%
ABEV3
16.73
▲ 2.07%
BBAS3
20.34
▲ 1.45%
B3SA3
14.92
▲ 2.12%
WEGE3
46.90
▲ 0.86%
PRIO3
53.29
▼ 1.21%
SUZB3
40.11
▼ 4.50%
RENT3
43.10
▲ 1.77%
AZZA3
18.99
▼ 4.09%
CSAN3
3.76
▲ 1.35%
RAIZ4
0.41
▼ 2.38%
PCAR3
2.28
▲ 0.89%
GMAT3
3.87
▲ 1.04%
PSSA3
53.26
▲ 1.25%
CVCB3
1.41
▼ 0.70%
POSI3
3.99
▲ 1.53%
SLCE3
13.17
▼ 0.98%
NATU3
7.98
▲ 2.05%
BRKM5
6.25
▼ 8.36%
RANI3
7.80
▲ 0.39%
CSNA3
4.73
▼ 1.87%
CMIN3
4.25
▲ 0.24%
USIM5
8.27
▼ 2.71%
GGBR4
21.42
▼ 0.09%
ENEV3
26.81
▲ 2.64%
NEOE3
33.80
— 0.00%
CPFE3
45.50
▲ 0.84%
CMIG4
10.96
▲ 1.58%
EQTL3
39.75
▲ 1.79%
LREN3
14.97
▲ 3.10%
VIVT3
34.79
▲ 0.64%
RAIL3
13.69
▲ 1.78%
KLABIN
16.96
▼ 0.53%
RAIA DROGASIL
17.35
▲ 0.87%
RDOR3
34.71
▲ 1.00%
HAPV3
10.24
▲ 1.19%
FLRY3
15.61
▲ 1.04%
SMTO3
15.04
▲ 2.24%
UGPA3
25.60
▲ 1.39%
VBBR3
29.69
▲ 1.78%
BBSE3
39.17
▲ 0.77%
BPAC11
54.66
▲ 0.66%
CURY3
35.11
▲ 1.15%
AERI3
2.08
▲ 0.48%
VIVARA
23.54
▲ 1.99%
COMPASS
24.94
▼ 2.35%
VAMOS
2.88
▲ 2.13%
SANB11
26.35
▲ 0.57%
ASAI3
8.83
▲ 2.56%
SBSP3
29.60
▲ 2.42%
WALMEX
50.86
▼ 0.51%
GMEXICO
200.00
▼ 1.48%
FEMSA
225.20
▲ 2.85%
CEMEX
21.51
▼ 0.97%
GFNORTE
182.90
▼ 1.59%
BIMBO
57.09
▲ 1.66%
TELEVISA
9.48
▼ 1.46%
AMX
23.20
▲ 0.74%
GAP
441.57
▼ 0.06%
ASUR
308.43
▼ 0.38%
OMA
245.60
▲ 0.65%
KOF
186.96
▲ 1.29%
GRUMA
283.22
▲ 0.17%
KIMBER
38.85
▲ 1.68%
SQM-B
65,950
▼ 1.64%
COPEC
5,765
▼ 0.64%
BSANTANDER
75.00
▲ 2.04%
FALABELLA
5,911
▲ 0.36%
ENELAM
82.00
▲ 0.60%
CENCOSUD
2,127
▲ 0.19%
CMPC
1,040
— 0.00%
BANCO CHILE
177.80
▲ 0.11%
LATAM AIR
26.97
▲ 3.25%
YPF
70,050
▼ 0.99%
GGAL
7,715
▲ 1.45%
PAMPA
4,973
▲ 0.25%
TXAR
682.50
▲ 1.49%
ALUAR
991.00
▲ 0.10%
TGS
9,225
▲ 1.15%
CEPU
2,274
▲ 2.29%
MIRGOR
16,075
▲ 0.16%
COME
41.38
▲ 0.88%
LOMA NEGRA
3,555
▲ 0.21%
BYMA
307.75
▲ 2.16%
TELECOM ARG
3,958
▲ 0.19%
ECOPETROL
14.72
▲ 1.87%
BANCOLOMBIA
79.27
▲ 0.48%
GRUPO AVAL
5.08
▼ 0.39%
CREDICORP
384.10
▲ 0.97%
SOUTHERN COPPER
171.26
▼ 1.99%
BUENAVENTURA
30.42
▼ 0.85%
MERCADOLIBRE
1,675
▲ 3.45%
NUBANK
13.17
▲ 5.70%
XP
16.13
▲ 2.22%
PAGSEGURO
9.07
▲ 3.78%
STONE
10.99
▲ 1.85%
GLOBANT
30.03
▲ 8.29%
TECNOGLASS
44.75
▲ 1.54%
GAP AIRPORT
252.48
▲ 0.11%
ASUR
308.43
▼ 0.38%
OMA AIRPORT
111.99
▼ 0.02%
AMX ADR
26.41
▲ 0.42%
FEMSA ADR
128.87
▲ 2.79%
CEMEX ADR
12.28
▼ 0.81%
PETROBRAS ADR
16.29
▼ 1.39%
VALE ADR
15.07
▼ 0.33%
ITAU ADR
8.23
▲ 2.49%
SANTANDER BR
5.20
▲ 0.78%
AMBEV ADR
3.23
▲ 2.87%
CSN
0.94
▼ 1.91%
GERDAU
4.15
▲ 0.24%
LATAM ADR
58.63
▲ 3.03%
BTC
59,591
▼ 0.58%
ETH
1,572
▲ 0.03%
SOL
71.42
▲ 1.43%
XRP
1.05
▼ 0.08%
BNB
551.28
▼ 0.92%
ADA
0.14
▼ 1.17%
DOGE
0.07
▼ 1.76%
AVAX
6.33
▼ 1.48%
LINK
7.25
▼ 0.49%
DOT
0.81
▼ 0.85%
LTC
42.92
▲ 1.87%
BCH
190.72
▼ 2.38%
TRX
0.32
▲ 0.61%
XLM
0.17
▼ 2.18%
HBAR
0.07
▼ 1.45%
NEAR
1.83
▼ 2.28%
ATOM
1.57
▲ 0.13%
AAVE
89.97
▼ 4.19%
SELIC
14.25%
—
EMBRAER
81.90
▲ 0.99%
EMBRAER ADR
63.75
▲ 1.51%
JBS
12.22
▲ 1.58%
JBS BDR
62.67
▲ 0.87%
MBRF3
17.10
▲ 2.70%
MBRFY
3.25
— 0.00%
INTER
5.44
▲ 3.82%
EGX
50,344
▼ 2.64%
USD/ZAR
16.41
▼ 0.47%
USD/NGN
1,378
▼ 0.09%
NIKKEI
69,361
▼ 4.15%
CSI300
4,868
▼ 3.03%
HSI
22,672
▼ 1.76%
NIFTY
24,056
▲ 0.14%
KOSPI
8,411
▼ 5.81%
JCI
5,896
▼ 1.72%
USD/JPY
161.69
▼ 0.06%
USD/CNY
6.7975
▲ 0.12%
DAX
24,671
▼ 1.29%
CAC
8,385
▼ 0.55%
FTSE
10,508
▼ 0.21%
MIB
51,265
▼ 1.00%
IBEX
19,425
▼ 0.45%
STOXX
635.88
▼ 0.68%
EUR/USD
1.1390
▲ 0.11%
GBP/USD
1.3198
▲ 0.01%
SPX
7,354
▼ 0.05%
DJI
51,876
▼ 0.09%
NDX
29,118
▼ 1.09%
RUT
3,010
▲ 0.07%
TSX
34,980
▲ 0.37%
VIX
18.41
▼ 2.54%
USD/CAD
1.4194
▲ 0.03%
US10Y
4.3720
▼ 0.46%
Venezuela · Defense
Key Facts
—The move. US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM), the US military command for Latin America, surged ships and aircraft to Venezuela’s coast on June 26.
—The hardware. The amphibious transport USS Fort Lauderdale and the combat ship USS Billings, plus C-17 and C-130 transports, MV-22 Ospreys and CH-47 Chinooks from Honduras.
—The footprint. A US two-star general, Major General Kevin Jarrard, is coordinating on the ground in Caracas; the Space Force is providing satellite imagery.
—The reversal. The same command that captured Nicolas Maduro 18 months ago is now operating inside Venezuela with the interim government’s blessing.
—The carrot. President Trump suspended some sanctions and pledged $150 million to enable the operation.
—The question. How long the forces stay — and whether the sanctions relief lasts — will show if this is a one-off or a lasting shift.
American warships are back off Venezuela’s coast — but this time they came to help, not to pressure. In one of the year’s sharpest reversals, the US military that removed Nicolas Maduro a year and a half ago has surged ships, aircraft and a general into the country at the new government’s request.
What the United States sent
On June 26, US Southern Command — the American military command responsible for Latin America and the Caribbean — ordered a large deployment toward Venezuela’s coast. Its area of responsibility runs from south of Mexico through Central and South America and the Caribbean, covering 31 countries, Venezuela among them.
The force is led from the sea by two warships: the USS Fort Lauderdale, an amphibious transport that carries Marines and helicopters, and the USS Billings, a smaller combat ship. They are backed by C-17 and C-130 transport planes, MV-22 Osprey tilt-rotors and CH-47 Chinook heavy helicopters flying in from the US base in Honduras.
The command’s four-star chief, General Francis Donovan, ordered the move, and a US two-star officer, Major General Kevin Jarrard, is coordinating on the ground in Caracas. The Space Force is supplying satellite imagery to map the damage.
The deployment followed a powerful earthquake that struck Venezuela days earlier, and several countries — Spain, Mexico, Colombia and Chile — sent rescue teams alongside the Americans. The military story, though, is less about the relief work than about what it does to the regional map.
Why this is a reversal
The same Southern Command now operating inside Venezuela is the one that captured Nicolas Maduro eighteen months ago. For most of the time since, it has been the instrument of pressure on the region, not a partner working on Venezuelan soil.
This deployment flips that posture. American warships, transport aircraft and a US general are now operating openly inside the country, with the interim government’s formal blessing.
To make it possible, President Trump temporarily suspended some sanctions on Venezuela and pledged $150 million toward the effort. It is the deepest, most visible US military footprint in the country since Maduro’s removal.
Venezuela’s interim leaders framed the request as humanitarian, and US officials have echoed that language. But inviting a former adversary’s military onto national soil is itself a political act, one that binds the new government more tightly to Washington.
A thickening US presence in the Caribbean
The surge did not come out of nowhere. The US Marine Corps has just re-flagged a major unit, the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit — a self-contained force of more than 1,300 Marines — as “Littoral Combat Force 24,” tailored for operating along contested coastlines.
“Littoral” simply means the coastal zone where sea meets land. The rename signals a force built for exactly the kind of near-shore work now unfolding off Venezuela.
It adds another standing piece to a US military presence in the basin that has thickened through the Cuba and Venezuela campaigns of recent months. That gives Southern Command a ready force already in the area as the Venezuela mission plays out.
Taken together — the warships that swung from pressure to relief, the re-flagged Marines and the satellites overhead — the US footprint in the basin is the largest in years. It is the kind of presence that is far easier to build than to unwind.
Why a foreign reader should care
Eighteen months after a US operation removed Venezuela’s president, the question is no longer whether Washington is involved but how deeply and for how long. A relief mission can quietly harden into a permanent posture.
Analysts in the regional press note that the relationship since the takeover has rested on two things, oil and security, and that Washington has a habit of intense but short engagements in Latin America. The open question is what remains once the emergency, and the cameras, move on.
There is a genuine humanitarian layer here that sits beside the strategic one. The help is real and badly needed, but it arrives wrapped in hardware that does not pack up and leave once the rubble is cleared.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did US forces deploy to Venezuela in June 2026?
US Southern Command surged forces to Venezuela’s coast on June 26, 2026 at the interim government’s request, following a powerful earthquake. It is also a force-posture event: it put US warships, aircraft and a general openly inside a country the United States had been pressuring.
What ships and aircraft did the US send?
The deployment is led by the amphibious transport USS Fort Lauderdale and the combat ship USS Billings, supported by C-17 and C-130 transport aircraft, MV-22 Osprey tilt-rotors and CH-47 Chinook helicopters from Honduras, with Space Force satellite imagery. Major General Kevin Jarrard is coordinating in Caracas.
What is US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM)?
SOUTHCOM is the US military command responsible for Latin America and the Caribbean, covering 31 countries from south of Mexico through Central and South America. It is led by a four-star commander, currently General Francis Donovan, and handles US military operations and security cooperation across the region.
What happened to US sanctions on Venezuela?
President Trump temporarily suspended some sanctions on Venezuela to enable the deployment and pledged $150 million toward the effort. Whether that relief is extended will be one early sign of how lasting the shift in posture proves to be.
View original source — Rio Times ↗


