Key Facts
What the world’s markets decided: chips sold off again on Friday over the rising cost of AI — the US chip group SMH fell −3.97% — but money flowed into safer sectors, and US healthcare surged +3.03%. The headline indexes barely moved: the S&P 500 −0.05% and the Dow −0.09%.
The mega-cap split: Apple rebounded +3.14% and Microsoft jumped +5.71%, recovering from their slides, but the chipmakers kept falling — Broadcom −3.67% and Nvidia −1.64%. Investors are leaving the AI trade, not the whole market.
Korea is now the epicentre: the chip pain has narrowed to one place — Samsung fell another −5.15% and the KOSPI −1.18%, while Taiwan +1.22% and Hong Kong +1.77% actually rose. The selloff is becoming Korea’s problem, not Asia’s.
Commodities split: metals climbed — gold +1.13%, copper +0.95% — while oil fell −3.50%, a mixed picture that helps the region’s miners but pressures its oil names.
What it means for Latin America: Brazil extended its record run +0.76% to a new high of 173,295 as its banks rode the global move into steadier shares, even as Petrobras slipped −1.39% on the lower oil. Mexico eased −0.28% and the real held firm at 5.17.
The world is quietly leaving the AI trade — not in a panic, but in an orderly walk toward healthcare, banks and the cheap, steady shares that Latin America is full of. The LatAm pre-open story is the same one all week, only clearer: as money rotates out of expensive, volatile tech, Brazil keeps setting records, proof that a broad, boring market is exactly where investors hide when the hot trade keeps breaking.
01 Money kept leaving tech, and Brazil kept rising
The LatAm pre-open story today is about a rotation that will not stop. For a third straight session, money walked out of expensive technology and into steadier shares, and Brazil was a clear winner.
The trigger was the same as all week. Chips sold off again on Friday — the chip group SMH fell −3.97% — on growing worry that the cost of building artificial intelligence has run too high.
But this was a rotation, not a rout. US healthcare surged +3.03%, staples and utilities rose, and the broad S&P 500 barely moved as money simply changed seats.
The mega-caps split in two. Apple rebounded +3.14% and Microsoft jumped +5.71% after their recent slides, while the pure chipmakers Broadcom and Nvidia kept falling.
Asia showed where the real pain now sits. Samsung fell another −5.15% and Korea’s KOSPI −1.18%, yet Taiwan rose +1.22% and Hong Kong +1.77%, a sign the selloff is narrowing to Korea rather than gripping the region.
Commodities, meanwhile, split down the middle. Gold rose +1.13% and copper +0.95%, but oil fell −3.50%, a mixed signal for a region that sells both metals and crude.
That backdrop is why Brazil kept climbing. A world rotating into banks, healthcare and value found exactly that in São Paulo, carrying the Bovespa to yet another record.
02 The mood dashboard
What we measure
Reading
In plain terms
Fear gauge (the VIX)
18.41
Eased −2.54% — a calm, orderly rotation, not a panic.
The rotation (into defensives)
+3.03%
US healthcare surged as money left tech for safety.
The chip pain (now Korea’s)
−5.15%
Samsung kept falling, but Taiwan and Hong Kong rose.
Brazil’s record (Bovespa)
173,295
Another new high, up +0.76% on the value rotation.
Commodities split (metals vs oil)
mixed
Gold and copper rose while oil fell −3.50%.
Sector leadership (US)
defensives
Healthcare, staples and utilities up; chips and industrials down.
The dashboard’s headline is an orderly rotation, not a scare. The fear gauge fell even as chips dropped, because money moved into safety rather than out of the market.
The most telling reading is the chip pain narrowing to Korea. With Samsung falling but Taiwan and Hong Kong rising, the selloff looks less like an Asian crisis and more like a Korean one.
The friendliest reading for the region is Brazil’s record. A market built on banks and value is exactly what the world is buying right now.
Live Market IntelligenceLatin America — Cross-Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Latin America — Cross-Market Board
Regional
Jun 29, 2026 · 04:54
Ibovespa · benchmark
173,295
+0.76%
+26.39% over 12 months
Market breadth · 5 names
80% advancing
4 ▲ advancing1 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / BRL
5.17
-0.03%
USD / MXN
17.48
-0.22%
USD / CLP
921.85
+0.00%
USD / COP
3,442
-0.25%
USD / ARS
1,477
-0.03%
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
173,295
+0.76%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
67,226
-0.28%
S&P IPSAChile
10,762
+0.52%
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
IBOV
173,295
+0.76%
+26.39%
171,990
—
—
—
IPSA
10,762
+0.52%
—
10,706
10,810
10,644
1,721,540,424
IPC MEX
67,226
-0.28%
+16.97%
67,416
—
—
—
MERVAL
3,123,411
+0.88%
+53.19%
3,096,068
—
—
—
COLCAP
2,286.19
+1.09%
—
9.04
9.05
9.02
4,133
BVL PERÚ
55,499.07
+1.21%
—
—
—
—
—
USD/BRL
5.17
-0.03%
-5.65%
5.17
5.17
5.17
—
EUR/BRL
5.89
+0.01%
-8.29%
5.89
5.89
5.88
—
USD/MXN
17.48
-0.22%
-7.06%
17.51
17.56
17.46
—
USD/CLP
921.85
+0.00%
+0.30%
921.85
921.85
921.85
—
USD/COP
3,442
-0.25%
-14.70%
3,451
3,452
3,437
—
USD/PEN
3.41
-0.46%
-2.09%
3.42
3.41
3.41
—
USD/ARS
1,477
-0.03%
+24.41%
1,478
1,477
1,477
—
USD/UYU
40.22
+0.00%
+1.19%
40.22
40.22
40.22
—
USD/PYG
6,084
+0.00%
-22.63%
6,084
6,084
6,084
—
USD/BOB
6.85
+0.00%
+1.72%
6.85
6.85
6.85
—
USD/DOP
59.28
+0.00%
+0.87%
59.28
59.28
58.86
—
USD/CRC
450.59
+0.00%
-8.43%
450.59
450.59
450.59
—
Largest moves today
BVL PERÚ
55,499.07
+1.21%
COLCAP
2,286.19
+1.09%
MERVAL
3,123,411
+0.88%
IBOV
173,295
+0.76%
IPSA
10,762
+0.52%
USD/PEN
3.41
-0.46%
IPC MEX
67,226
-0.28%
USD/COP
3,442
-0.25%
The session read
The Ibovespa rose 0.76%, with breadth positive — 4 of 5 names higher. BVL PERÚ led, while IPC MEX lagged.
03 The LatAm pre-open read: the rotation keeps paying off
The heart of the story is where money goes when it leaves the AI trade. This week the answer has been consistent — into cheap, steady value, and that is what Latin America offers.
Brazil is built for this moment. Its index is full of banks and consumer names, the kind of steady shares that benefit when investors flee expensive, volatile tech.
That is why the Bovespa keeps setting records while Asia’s chip giants bleed. The same rotation that hammered Samsung lifted Brazil’s lenders to another high.
There is a catch in the commodities, though. Oil’s −3.50% drop pulled Petrobras lower, so this record was led by banks rather than the region’s energy and mining names.
The takeaway is a confident but qualified one. Latin America is the prime shelter from the tech storm, even if a softer oil price means its gains are now driven by banks more than barrels.
04 The wider world — who won and who lost
Market
Move
In plain terms
Vietnam (country fund)
+1.07%
Firm — a fast-growing importer held up well.
Malaysia (country fund)
+1.01%
Rose, shrugging off the Korea-centred selloff.
Africa (regional fund)
+0.94%
Gained as metals climbed.
India (Sensex)
−0.05%
Flat — the giant importer stayed steady again.
Saudi Arabia (country fund)
−0.05%
Flat, even as oil fell back.
South Africa (country fund)
−0.25%
Little changed as the metals bounce offset the nerves.
Indonesia (Jakarta)
−0.97%
Slipped with the softer Asian mood.
Russia (MOEX)
quiet
Walled off by sanctions, trading on its own clock.
The table shows how contained the damage was. Outside Korea and Japan, much of the emerging world held firm or rose, from Malaysia and Vietnam to Africa.
Latin America sat comfortably in that group. Like the metals-driven markets of Africa, it gained from the commodity bounce and the rotation into value, far from the Korean chip storm.
05 The gaps that tell the story
Comparison
Gap (points)
What it means
Microsoft (+5.71%) vs Korea’s Samsung (−5.15%)
+10.86
The mega-cap split — US software rebounded, the memory giant kept falling.
US healthcare XLV (+3.03%) vs US chips SMH (−3.97%)
+7.00
The rotation in one line — out of chips, into defensive healthcare.
Brazil ETF EWZ (+1.43%) vs Korea ETF EWY (−3.77%)
+5.20
Money chased Brazil and fled Korea.
Gold GLD (+1.13%) vs Oil USO (−3.50%)
+4.63
The commodity split — metals up, crude down.
Hong Kong (+1.77%) vs Korea KOSPI (−1.18%)
+2.95
Even within Asia, the pain was Korea’s alone.
The widest gap of all — Microsoft up nearly 6% while Samsung crashed 5% — captures the new shape of the selloff. Investors are punishing the chipmakers while buying back the software giants.
The Brazil-versus-Korea gap is the one that matters for the region. Money is flowing into São Paulo and out of Seoul, a clear vote for value over volatile chips.
06 The big picture: a rotation, not a crash
The deeper LatAm pre-open message from scanning the whole world is reassuring in its way. This is not a market in freefall but one rotating — out of an expensive, crowded AI trade and into cheaper, steadier corners.
That distinction matters enormously for Latin America. A crash drags everything down together, but a rotation rewards exactly the broad, value-heavy markets the region is built on.
For the region, the practical read is that the trend is its friend. As long as the world keeps leaving tech for value, Brazil’s banks and the wider market have a tailwind.
The honest caveat is twofold — a softer oil price and the inflation worry behind the whole move. Cheaper crude trims Petrobras, and any fresh sign of US rate hikes could lift the dollar and test the calm.
The thing to watch is whether the rotation broadens or the chip pain spreads back out of Korea. For now, the region is on the right side of both.
07 What currencies are telling us
Currency
Now
Move
In plain terms
Dollar vs Brazilian real
5.17
−0.03%
Real firm — steady as Brazil’s market set another record.
Dollar vs Mexican peso
17.49
−0.15%
Peso firmed slightly, calm despite the global churn.
Dollar vs Argentine peso
1,477
−0.03%
Flat — Argentina’s gains stayed in shares.
Dollar vs Korean won
1,544
+0.60%
Won weakened as money kept fleeing Korea’s chip shares.
Dollar vs Indian rupee
94.28
−0.08%
Rupee firmed, helped by the lower oil price.
Euro vs dollar
1.1393
+0.10%
Euro steady, even as Europe’s stock markets fell.
Dollar vs Chilean peso
922
0.00%
Flat — copper’s gain steadied the currency.
For the LatAm pre-open, currencies told a calm, regional story. The real and the Mexican peso held firm, a sign that money sees Latin America as a destination, not a risk, this week.
The clear exception was the Korean won, which weakened as foreign investors kept pulling out of Samsung and the chip trade. The currency map matches the stock map exactly.
08 Crypto and commodities — the clues after the stock market closes
What
Now
Move
In plain terms
Bitcoin
59,643
+0.19%
Holding below 60,000 — the riskiest corner stayed quiet.
Ethereum
1,570
−0.01%
Flat — crypto sat out the day’s moves.
Oil (US crude proxy)
105.48
−3.50%
Fell back — a headwind for Petrobras and the region’s energy names.
Gold
373.63
+1.13%
Climbed as money sought a steadier haven.
Copper
37.33
+0.95%
Firmed — a quiet support for Chile and Brazil’s miners.
The commodity scan was a tale of two halves. Metals rose as investors sought steadier assets, while oil fell back, easing inflation but trimming the region’s energy earnings.
Crypto, meanwhile, stayed on the sidelines. Bitcoin held below 60,000 and Ethereum was flat, a sign the day’s action was all about rotation, not risk-taking.
09 What it means region by region
Brazil: São Paulo rose +0.76% to another record 173,295, lifted by a global rotation into the banks and value shares that fill its index. Its US-listed fund jumped +1.43%, though Petrobras fell −1.39% on the lower oil and Vale was flat, so the gain was bank-led, with the real firm at 5.17.
Brazil reopens at a high, its lenders riding the worldwide move into steady value even as cheaper oil weighs on its energy giants.
Mexico: Mexico eased −0.28%, a mild dip after Friday’s jump, while the peso firmed to 17.49. The currency’s calm suggests no fresh worry beyond the usual tariff cloud.
Argentina: Argentina’s US-listed fund rose +0.81% as the calmer mood helped. The local Merval index reading remains unreliable on the feed because of a glitch, and the peso held near 1,477.
Beyond the Americas: The damage stayed contained — Malaysia +1.01%, Vietnam +1.07% and Africa +0.94% rose, while India held flat. Russia’s MOEX, walled off by sanctions, traded quietly on its own clock.
Asia (the epicentre): Korea −1.18% with Samsung −5.15% kept bleeding and Japan −0.89% slipped, but Taiwan +1.22% and Hong Kong +1.77% rose. The chip pain is narrowing to Korea rather than spreading across the region.
10 What to watch through the day
Brazil’s record run: The Bovespa keeps hitting highs on the rotation into value — watch whether the streak holds or the lower oil price finally weighs on the index.
Is the chip pain still Korea’s alone? Samsung kept falling while Taiwan and Hong Kong rose — watch whether the selloff stays contained or spreads back across Asia.
The defensive rotation: Healthcare surged and money keeps leaving tech — watch whether the move into value broadens or reverses back to growth.
Oil versus metals: Crude fell while gold and copper rose — watch the split, which trims Petrobras but helps the region’s miners.
Inflation and the Fed: The rate-hike worry still lurks behind the rotation — watch any fresh data that could lift the dollar and test the region’s calm.
Frequently Asked Questions
What did global markets decide overnight, in one sentence?
The rotation out of expensive tech rolled on — chips fell again (SMH −3.97%, Samsung −5.15%) on worries about the cost of AI, but money flowed into defensives, with US healthcare +3.03% and Apple and Microsoft rebounding, lifting Brazil to another record (+0.76% to 173,295) even as the headline indexes barely moved.
Why does Brazil keep setting records while chips fall?
Because of what its market is built on. Brazil is full of banks and value shares, not chipmakers.
When investors leave the expensive AI trade, they buy cheap, steady companies instead — and Brazil’s lenders are exactly that, carrying the Bovespa to record after record.
Which global signal matters most for Latin America today?
The rotation into value. As long as the world keeps moving out of tech and into steadier shares, Latin America’s broad, bank-heavy market benefits directly.
The thing to keep an eye on is oil, since its −3.50% drop trims the earnings of energy names like Petrobras even as the rotation lifts the banks.
What would change this picture?
A spread of the chip selloff back out of Korea into a broader crash would eventually pull even value markets down. On the other side, a steadying in tech and firmer oil would let Latin America keep leading, with both its banks and its commodity giants rising together.
Connected Coverage
The Brazil Morning Call that picks up where this piece leaves off is filed daily on the Markets desk. Argentina’s market swings are tracked on our Argentina desk, the wider regional picture on our Latin America markets page, Mexico and the tariff story in the Mexico desk, and the global backdrop in the Market Reports hub.
Reported by Richard Mann for The Rio Times — Latin American financial news, filed June 29, 2026, before Brazil’s market open. It draws on a deep sweep of about 135 markets worldwide via EODHD — the prior US and European closes from Friday, June 26, the live Asian session on Monday, June 29, plus real-time currencies, crypto and commodities, with country funds used where local indexes were unavailable and the USO, GLD and CPER ETF proxies used for commodities, while a few unreliable feeds were excluded.
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