Key Facts
The S&P/BMV IPC closed at 67,641, up 0.62% on June 29, lifting off recent lows after a softer few weeks.
The lift came from abroad. The United States and Iran agreed to step back from their latest standoff, draining away the fear of an energy-price spike.
It was a broad Latin American advance, with markets across the region firming rather than any single Mexican stock doing the work.
The peso held firm near 17.46 per dollar, supported by Mexico’s relatively high interest rates and a calmer dollar abroad.
The index is still down about 4% over the past month but remains up around 17% over the year, steadying along its long-run trend.
Oil and Wall Street’s mood remain the daily drivers, with nearshoring and the World Cup the slower-burning supports underneath.
Today’s Focus
Mexico’s market lives and dies by the price of oil and the mood on Wall Street, and on Monday both turned its way. With Washington and Tehran agreeing to pull back from their latest confrontation, the fear of an energy-price spike that had hung over the region drained away.
For a country that both pumps oil and buys a lot of fuel from its northern neighbour, that calm is doubly welcome. It showed up as a steady, broad-based gain rather than a one-stock fluke.
01 A broad gain off recent lows
Mexican shares had a good day. The S&P/BMV IPC climbed 0.62% on June 29 to finish at 67,641 points, recovering some of the ground it had lost over a softer few weeks.
The trigger came from abroad rather than at home. News that the United States and Iran had agreed to halt their latest hostilities and return to talks took the heat out of energy markets and put investors in a buying mood worldwide.
That backdrop matters more for Mexico than for most. The country is unusual in being both an oil producer and a heavy importer of natural gas and refined fuel from the United States, so a calmer oil price cuts the risk of imported inflation feeding through to households and factories.
When that risk recedes, Mexican shares tend to breathe easier, and on Monday they did, rising in step with a broad advance across Latin America. The gain was steady and broad rather than driven by any single name.
Assessment — A relief bounce, oil-led MEDIUM
The advance is well-founded but borrowed: it rests on a calmer oil price and a brighter global mood rather than a fresh catalyst at home. A lasting US–Iran de-escalation would keep that support in place.
The index is still down about 4% on the month, having drifted below its earlier records, so this reads as a recovery off the lows rather than a return to form. Oil and Wall Street, not Mexican fundamentals, still set the daily direction.
02 The session in numbers
Instrument
Close
Change
S&P/BMV IPC
67,641
+0.62%
US dollar (MXN)
~17.46
peso firmer
Day’s high
68,035
—
Day’s low
67,060
—
One-month change
—
−4.0%
One-year change
—
+17%
Currency cells are signed by the direction of the local currency: a stronger peso shows as a gain, a weaker peso as a loss, regardless of how the dollar quote moves.
Live Market IntelligenceMexico — Live Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Mexico — Live Market Board
BMV · Mexico City
Jun 30, 2026 · 02:30
S&P/BMV IPC · benchmark
67,641
+0.62%
+17.74% over 12 months
Market breadth · 14 names
71% advancing
10 ▲ advancing4 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / MXN
17.48
+0.05%
Brent crude
73.47
+0.44%
Gold
3,999
-0.59%
Sector heatmap · average move today
Financials
+1.68%
GFNORTE
Telecom
+1.33%
TELEVISA, AMX
Other
+1.29%
AMX ADR
Industrials
+0.74%
GAP, ASUR, OMA
Mining
+0.50%
GMEXICO
Consumer Staples
+0.29%
WALMEX, FEMSA, BIMBO, KOF
Materials
-1.58%
CEMEX
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
173,205
-0.05%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
67,641
+0.62%
S&P IPSAChile
10,762
+0.52%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,176,751
+1.71%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,286.19
+1.09%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
55,499.07
+1.21%
Full instrument board
InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
IPC MEX
67,641
+0.62%
+17.74%
67,226
—
—
—
USD/MXN
17.48
+0.05%
-7.03%
17.47
17.50
17.45
—
WALMEX
51.10
+0.59%
-17.62%
50.80
51.51
50.14
3,935,449
GMEXICO
201.13
+0.50%
+77.64%
200.13
204.79
196.99
1,929,405
FEMSA
228.93
+1.94%
+18.19%
224.58
228.98
226.26
618,480
CEMEX
21.20
-1.58%
+63.74%
21.54
21.40
21.01
3,238,904
GFNORTE
185.30
+1.68%
+7.45%
182.23
186.77
182.84
1,659,284
BIMBO
57.02
+0.02%
+8.87%
57.01
57.97
55.68
723,484
TELEVISA
9.66
+1.79%
+15.81%
9.49
10.00
9.44
1,134,747
AMX
23.41
+0.86%
+38.87%
23.21
23.79
23.08
6,301,427
GAP
447.15
+1.66%
+3.72%
439.85
455.00
437.39
432,407
ASUR
308.42
0.00%
-3.28%
308.43
309.58
302.25
59,019
OMA
246.32
+0.57%
-0.17%
244.92
247.55
242.22
245,895
KOF
186.16
-0.53%
+2.59%
187.15
189.48
186.00
207,866
GRUMA
282.50
-0.24%
-12.64%
283.18
284.75
280.92
265,320
KIMBER
38.89
-0.03%
+12.56%
38.90
39.99
38.02
1,365,791
AMX ADR
26.75
+1.29%
+49.11%
26.41
26.79
26.20
942,713
Largest moves today
FEMSA
228.93
+1.94%
TELEVISA
9.66
+1.79%
GFNORTE
185.30
+1.68%
GAP
447.15
+1.66%
CEMEX
21.20
-1.58%
AMX ADR
26.75
+1.29%
AMX
23.41
+0.86%
IPC MEX
67,641
+0.62%
The session read
The S&P/BMV IPC rose 0.62%, with breadth positive — 10 of 14 names higher. Financials led, while Materials lagged.
03 What to watch next
For Mexico, the single biggest variable remains the oil price, and behind it the durability of the calm between the United States and Iran. A lasting de-escalation would keep energy costs contained and lift one of the main weights on the index; a relapse would quickly put it back.
Closer to home, investors are watching the path of interest rates and inflation, which shape how much room the central bank has to keep easing. Further out sit the structural draws — the relocation of supply chains closer to the United States, and the spending lift expected from hosting World Cup matches.
Those are slow-burning supports rather than daily drivers. For now, the market is still trading the headlines.
04 Connected coverage
This report continues The Rio Times’ daily coverage of Mexico’s market: see the prior session, Mexico’s Stock Market Holds Most of Its Rate-Decision Jump. For the wider regional and global picture, see the Global Economy Briefing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where did Mexico’s IPC close on June 29, 2026?
The S&P/BMV IPC rose 0.62 percent to 67,641 points, a solid gain that pulled the index up off recent lows after a softer few weeks.
Why did Mexican stocks rise on June 29?
A calmer global mood did most of the work. After the United States and Iran agreed to step back from their latest hostilities, fears of an energy-price spike eased, and investors moved back toward shares worldwide.
Mexico rose alongside a broad Latin American advance.
Why does the price of oil matter so much for Mexico?
Mexico sits on both sides of the energy ledger: it pumps its own oil but also imports a great deal of natural gas and refined fuel from the United States. When global energy prices calm down, the inflation risk for Mexican households and factories eases, which tends to help shares.
How is the Mexican peso doing?
The peso has stayed firm, supported by Mexico’s relatively high interest rates and a calmer dollar abroad. A steady currency helps keep imported inflation in check and supports the case for the central bank to keep easing carefully.
What is the bigger picture for the Mexican market?
The index has slipped from the record highs it set earlier in the year, weighed down at times by energy worries and a cautious global mood. The structural supports remain in place, from nearshoring to the World Cup boost, but the market still takes its cue from oil and the tone on Wall Street.
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