The Latin American Pulse · Tuesday, June 30, 2026 · The 60-second read
The bottom line
The AI trade roared back, and Brazil paused. A risk-on relief rally — helped by resumed US–Iran talks — sent the Nasdaq up 2.07% and chips up 3.33%, reversing last week’s flight to value; Brazil’s Ibovespa slipped 0.05% to 173,205 just below its record while Argentina’s Merval led the region, up 1.71%.
Uruguay’s calm cracked. A new poll put President Yamandú Orsi’s approval at just 20% after a discounted-SUV scandal, denting one of the region’s steadiest democracies.
Venezuela leaned on its old adversary. US troops raced to reopen the quake-hit Caracas airport and the port of La Guaira so aid can reach survivors of a disaster that has killed an estimated 1,430.
The regional tape
Monday’s close · the markets snapshot
AR · Merval
≈3.18M
▲ 1.71%
leads the region as the reform trade firms
MX · IPC
67,641
▲ 0.62%
extends its gains before the USMCA review
CO · COLCAP
2,286
▲ 1.09%
stretches its post-election rebound
CL · IPSA
10,763
▲ 0.53%
holds firm as the Salitre war games run
BR · Ibovespa
173,205
▼ 0.05%
pauses a fraction below its record
BR · USD/BRL
≈5.17
real steady
the real holds firm as risk returns
US · Nasdaq
▲ 2.07%
AI roars back
chips +3.33%, Tesla +8.46% on a relief rally
Oil · WTI
≈$70
▲ 1.52%
bounces as risk appetite returns
The big picture · the snap-back
For a week, the story was simple: money fled expensive technology for the cheap, steady value that Latin America has in abundance, and Brazil set record after record. On Monday, the trade snapped back.
A risk-on relief rally, helped by resumed US–Iran talks, sent the AI names roaring back to life — the Nasdaq up 2.07%, chips up 3.33%, Tesla up 8.46% — and the money that had hidden in value went chasing growth again.
Brazil did not break; it simply paused, a fraction below its record, while the rest of the region kept climbing.
Argentina’s Merval led, up 1.71% to about 3.18 million; Mexico’s IPC rose 0.62% to 67,641; Colombia’s COLCAP added 1.09% to 2,286 and Chile’s IPSA edged up 0.53% to 10,763.
Only Brazil dipped, and barely, slipping 0.05% to 173,205 as the hot money chased chips over value. The real held firm at 5.17 and oil bounced 1.52%, a reminder that the region’s footing is sturdier than a single session.
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 30, 2026 · 02:36
Ibovespa · benchmark
173,205
-0.05%
+24.74% over 12 months
Market breadth · 5 names
100% advancing
5 ▲ advancing0 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / BRL
5.17
-0.16%
USD / MXN
17.48
+0.06%
USD / CLP
921.60
-0.04%
USD / COP
3,443
-0.24%
USD / ARS
1,481
+0.24%
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
Instrument
Last
Change
YoY
Prev.
High
Low
Volume
IBOV
173,205
-0.05%
+24.74%
173,295
—
—
—
IPSA
10,762
+0.52%
—
10,706
10,810
10,644
—
IPC MEX
67,641
+0.62%
+17.74%
67,226
—
—
—
MERVAL
3,176,751
+1.71%
+59.25%
3,123,411
—
—
—
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
-0.16%
-5.69%
5.17
5.18
5.17
—
EUR/BRL
5.89
+0.06%
-8.30%
5.88
5.90
5.89
—
USD/MXN
17.48
+0.06%
-6.99%
17.47
17.50
17.45
—
USD/CLP
921.60
-0.04%
+0.27%
921.98
921.60
921.60
—
USD/COP
3,443
-0.24%
-14.69%
3,451
3,445
3,443
—
USD/PEN
3.41
-0.46%
-2.09%
3.42
3.41
3.41
—
USD/ARS
1,481
+0.24%
+24.74%
1,478
1,482
1,474
—
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
59.61
+0.56%
+1.43%
59.28
59.61
58.86
—
USD/CRC
450.59
+0.00%
-8.43%
450.59
456.70
450.59
—
Largest moves today
MERVAL
3,176,751
+1.71%
BVL PERÚ
55,499.07
+1.21%
COLCAP
2,286.19
+1.09%
IPC MEX
67,641
+0.62%
USD/DOP
59.61
+0.56%
IPSA
10,762
+0.52%
USD/PEN
3.41
-0.46%
USD/COP
3,443
-0.24%
The session read
The Ibovespa eased 0.05%, with breadth positive — 5 of 5 names higher. MERVAL led, while IPSA lagged.
From The Rio Times
Related coverage · 29 Jun 2026
Milei Names Diego Santilli as His New Cabinet Chief
Read →
Deep dive · the rotation, and the politics
The day had two layers. The first was the market reversal: a hot, crowded artificial-intelligence trade that had cracked for a week came roaring back on a burst of risk appetite, and the value stocks that had carried Brazil suddenly sat out the rally.
The question our traders are asking is whether this is a one-day snap-back or the moment the hot money starts leaving value behind. For now, the region’s breadth — Argentina, Mexico, Colombia and Chile all higher — argues it was the former.
The second layer was political, and harder. Uruguay’s president, long a symbol of regional stability, sank to 20% in a new poll; Venezuela leaned on US troops to reopen its quake-hit airport; and a hawkish US Federal Reserve, now seen likely to hike by December, hung over every emerging market in the room.
Country by country
Brazil
A breather at the top.
Brazil’s Ibovespa slipped just 0.05% to 173,205, a fraction below Friday’s record, as a global risk-on rally pulled money back into technology and away from the cheap value that had carried it to record after record. The real held firm at about 5.17 and oil’s 1.52% bounce gave Petrobras fresh support. Off the screen it was busy: Brazil beat Japan 2–1 on a stoppage-time winner to reach the World Cup’s last 16, a São Paulo court handed petrochemical maker Braskem a 60-day shield in its $9.4 billion debt fight, and farmer SLC Agrícola won a $358 million land battle.
Argentina
The region’s market leader.
Argentina’s Merval led Latin America, jumping 1.71% to about 3.18 million as the reform trade firmed and the ‘Súper RIGI’ investment regime moved toward the Senate. Javier Milei travels to the Mercosur leaders’ summit in Paraguay on June 30 to project his deregulation push abroad, though he still must name a new cabinet chief after Manuel Adorni’s weekend resignation over undeclared savings. The market, at least, is betting the agenda survives the scandal.
Mexico
Grinding higher before the trade test.
Mexico’s IPC rose 0.62% to 67,641, extending its gains the day before the USMCA review formally opens on July 1, with in-person talks set for July 20 in Mexico City. The backdrop is strong — exports surged 22.6% in the first five months to $317.2 billion — even as autos slipped and a hawkish US Federal Reserve, now seen likely to hike by December, hangs over every emerging market.
Uruguay
The steady hand wobbles.
A new Cifra poll put President Yamandú Orsi’s approval at just 20% with disapproval at 65%, a collapse driven by a row over a discounted luxury SUV he bought just before taking office. The slide — nineteen points of added disapproval since February, with less than half his own Frente Amplio still behind him — dents the calm-and-credible premium that has made investment-grade Uruguay a quiet magnet for capital.
Venezuela
Leaning on an old adversary.
About 100 US Air Force airmen and 130 Marines are racing to reopen the Caracas airport and the port of La Guaira so aid can reach survivors of the June 24 earthquake, which has killed an estimated 1,430 with a UN-estimated $6.7 billion damage bill. The mission is run by US Southern Command — the same body that seized Nicolás Maduro in January — now operating with the interim government’s blessing as Washington eases some sanctions.
Colombia
Steadying into the handover.
Colombia’s COLCAP added 1.09% to 2,286, extending its rebound as the election overhang lifts and president-elect Abelardo de la Espriella builds his cabinet ahead of the tense August 7 handover from Gustavo Petro. On the ground, Colombia is racing to open its first Pacific-coast gas import terminal by November to cover a looming shortfall, even as a Canadian court lets Canacol cut some Caribbean gas contracts.
Chile
Holding firm, on and off the pitch.
Chile’s IPSA rose 0.53% to 10,763 even as copper eased, while the country keeps hosting six air forces at the Salitre 2026 exercise in the northern desert. The politics stay rocky — José Antonio Kast’s approval sits below 40% — and a financial mess is spilling into sport, with the collapse of fund manager Sartor threatening to force the controlling stake in football giant Universidad de Chile onto the auction block.
The risk dashboard
Our 1–5 read across ten countries · higher = more pressure
Country
Score
Pol
Fin
Sec
Mkt
Ext
What’s driving it
Cuba
4.8
5
5
4
5
5
A record-tier blackout left about two-thirds of the island dark, with a 2,056-megawatt deficit, as Washington presses Havana to reform at the OAS assembly.
Venezuela
4.8
5
5
5
4
3
A twin earthquake has killed some 1,430 with a UN-estimated $6.7bn bill; US troops are reopening the Caracas airport and La Guaira port to move aid as Washington eases some sanctions.
Bolivia
4.6
5
5
3
4
4
The dollar peg ended in a roughly 30% devaluation to about 9.73, with reserves below $2bn and IMF talks under way, while road blockades ease.
Peru
4.0
5
3
4
3
3
Fujimori’s narrow win stands with monitors calling the vote clean, but the loser disputes it and a caretaker governs until the July 28 handover; a Peru–Guatemala trade deal opens July 1.
Uruguay
3.8
5
2
2
2
3
President Orsi’s approval has collapsed to 20% with disapproval at 65% after a discounted-SUV scandal, with less than half his own coalition behind him — a jolt to one of the region’s steadiest democracies.
Colombia
3.6
4
4
4
3
4
The COLCAP added 1.09% to 2,286 and de la Espriella is building his cabinet, but a frosty transition from Petro and an energy crunch loom before August 7.
Ecuador
3.6
4
3
5
3
3
A 60-day security state of exception grips ten provinces and cheap oil keeps squeezing the budget, even as a World Cup run lifts the national mood.
Mexico
3.4
4
3
4
3
4
Exports surged 22.6% and the IPC rose 0.62% to 67,641, but autos slipped and the USMCA review opens July 1 under a hawkish-Fed shadow.
Brazil
3.2
4
4
3
2
4
The Ibovespa paused 0.05% below its record as the AI trade roared back; a Braskem debt shield and the mining regulator’s indictment sit against a softer-inflation rate-cut case.
Argentina
3.0
4
3
2
3
3
The Merval led the region, up 1.71%, and the ‘Súper RIGI’ advanced, but the cabinet-chief vacancy after Adorni’s resignation still clouds Milei’s grip.
Scale: 1 calm · 2 favourable · 3 mixed · 4 elevated · 5 severe. Pillars: politics, finances, security, markets, outside ties. Updated weekly; drivers refreshed daily.
The mood ahead
The region holds the rally.
If Monday’s snap-back proves a one-day affair and the rotation back into value resumes, Latin America’s banks and miners can keep leading, with Argentina’s reform trade and a confirmed Colombian transition adding home-grown momentum.
The Fed and the dollar bite.
If a hawkish Federal Reserve follows through and the dollar strengthens, the same emerging markets now rallying would face pressure, while Uruguay’s political wobble and Venezuela’s crisis are reminders that the region’s risks are rarely only financial.
What to watch — whether the AI snap-back holds or value resumes, the path of the US dollar after a hawkish Fed, Argentina’s cabinet reshuffle and the Mercosur summit, and the USMCA review opening July 1. These are our editorial views, not investment advice.
The briefing · 12 things worth knowing
The AI trade roared back. A risk-on relief rally, helped by resumed US–Iran talks, sent the Nasdaq up 2.07%, chips up 3.33% and Tesla up 8.46%, reversing last week’s flight to value.
Brazil paused at its record. The Ibovespa slipped 0.05% to 173,205 as money chased chips over value, while the real held firm at about 5.17 per dollar.
Argentina’s Merval led the region. The benchmark jumped 1.71% to about 3.18 million as the reform trade firmed and the ‘Súper RIGI’ moved toward the Senate.
Mexico’s IPC rose 0.62%. The index reached 67,641 the day before the USMCA review opens on July 1, with exports still booming.
Uruguay’s president sank to 20%. A Cifra poll put Yamandú Orsi’s approval at 20% and disapproval at 65% after a row over a discounted luxury SUV.
US troops moved into Venezuela’s ruins. About 100 Air Force airmen and 130 Marines are racing to reopen the Caracas airport and La Guaira port for quake aid; the toll is near 1,430.
Brazil reached the World Cup last 16. A stoppage-time Gabriel Martinelli winner beat Japan 2–1 in Houston, sealing a comeback from a goal down.
Braskem won a 60-day court shield. A São Paulo court froze creditor actions while the petrochemical maker renegotiates a $9.4 billion debt pile.
SLC Agrícola won a $358m land fight. Brazil’s listed farmer used a first-refusal right to snatch a Mato Grosso block, to JP Morgan’s chagrin.
A Peru–Guatemala trade deal switches on July 1. The pact takes effect fourteen years after it was first signed, covering about $206 million in two-way trade.
Commodities flipped with the mood. Oil bounced 1.52% while gold fell 1.35% and copper eased, a risk-on mix that helps energy names and cools metals.
A hawkish Fed looms over the region. Markets now price a 77% chance of a US rate hike by December, a weight on every emerging-market currency and bond.
Pipeline · business & sector watch
Energy. Oil bounced 1.52% as risk appetite returned, a relief for exporters like Colombia and Ecuador, even as Colombia races to open its first Pacific-coast gas terminal by November to head off a drought-driven shortfall. The swing shows how much of the region’s fortunes still ride on a single commodity price.
Industry & metals. Copper eased even as Chile’s IPSA held firm, while Brazil’s SLC Agrícola won a $358 million Mato Grosso land fight using a first-refusal right. In Argentina, the ‘Súper RIGI’ regime advanced, aiming to pull mega-investment into lithium, energy and data centres.
Markets plumbing. Braskem won a 60-day court shield over a $9.4 billion debt pile, buying time to renegotiate, while Argentina’s reform trade firmed as the Merval led the region. The contrast with a hawkish Fed — now seen likely to hike by December — is the tension every regional treasurer is watching.
The week ahead
Five dates that move the region
Jun 30
Mercosur summit
Leaders gather in Paraguay, with Argentina’s Milei attending as the bloc weighs trade and an investment push.
Jul 1
USMCA review, Peru–Guatemala FTA & Uruguay tax
The North American trade review opens, a Peru–Guatemala free-trade deal takes effect, and Uruguay’s softened foreign-income tax rules begin for new residents.
Jul 3–7
Peru proclaims its winner
Electoral authorities are due to formally proclaim Keiko Fujimori the runoff winner ahead of the July 28 handover.
Jul 20
USMCA talks in Mexico City
In-person trade negotiations are set to begin, a key test of the North American relationship.
Aug 7
Colombia’s handover
Abelardo de la Espriella is set to take office, beginning a tense transition from the outgoing Gustavo Petro.
Frequently asked questions
Why did Brazil pause while Argentina jumped?
Monday reversed last week’s trade: as the AI rally roared back, money rotated out of the cheap, steady value stocks that dominate Brazil’s index and back into technology, so the Ibovespa slipped a fraction below its record. Argentina’s Merval, by contrast, runs on its own reform-trade momentum — the ‘Súper RIGI’ advancing and the market clawing back its MSCI-snub losses — so it led the region even on a day Brazil paused.
What is behind Uruguay’s president sinking to 20%?
A new Cifra poll put President Yamandú Orsi’s approval at 20% and disapproval at 65%, the trigger being a row over a luxury SUV he bought at a steep discount just before taking office. Beyond the car, the numbers show a hardening discontent — nineteen points of added disapproval since February, with less than half his own Frente Amplio coalition still behind him — a sharp jolt for one of Latin America’s most stable democracies.
What are US troops doing in Venezuela?
About 100 US Air Force airmen and 130 Marines are working to reopen the airport serving Caracas and the port of La Guaira so earthquake aid can reach survivors of the June 24 disaster, which has killed an estimated 1,430. The operation is run by US Southern Command — the same body that seized Nicolás Maduro in January — now operating with the interim government’s blessing as Washington eases some sanctions.
What does a hawkish Fed mean for Latin America?
With the US central bank now seen likely to raise rates by December — markets price about a 77% chance — a firmer dollar and higher US yields tend to pull capital out of emerging markets and pressure their currencies and bonds. That is the cloud over an otherwise resilient region: even as Latin American stocks rally, a hawkish Fed raises the cost of the foreign money many of these economies rely on.
Is the value trade over?
Not necessarily — Monday looked more like a one-day snap-back than a trend change. The rotation into cheap, dividend-paying emerging markets rests on real fundamentals, and a single risk-on session driven by resumed US–Iran talks does not undo it. The open question, as our pre-open put it, is whether this is a one-day bounce or the moment the hot money starts leaving value behind.
Read & watch
WatchThe Mercosur leaders’ summit in Paraguay on June 30 and the USMCA review opening July 1.
ReadThe Rio Times pre-open on the AI trade roaring back as Brazil pauses at its record.
WatchWho Milei names as cabinet chief, and the ‘Súper RIGI’ as it moves to the Senate.
ReadOur coverage of Uruguay’s president sinking to 20% as a truck scandal bites.
WatchVenezuela’s airport and port reopening, and whether the stalled transition talks find a calendar.
Companion: today’s Latin America Power Map (PDF) — our full daily dossier on who holds power across the region.
Sources & method. The market snapshot uses Monday, June 29 closes from The Rio Times’ market data and TradingView feed (Ibovespa 173,205, IPC 67,641, IPSA 10,763, Merval about 3.18 million and COLCAP 2,286); USD/BRL (about 5.17) and the US-equity and oil readings (the Nasdaq up 2.07%, oil up 1.52%) are from our June 30 LatAm pre-open. The reporting draws on The Rio Times’ June 29 coverage and the regional wires: Brazil’s pause at its record, the Braskem debt shield and the SLC Agrícola land deal; Argentina’s Merval rally and the Mercosur summit; Mexico’s export boom; Uruguay’s president sinking to 20%; the US deployment to reopen Venezuela’s airport and port; and the Peru–Guatemala trade deal. The 1–5 risk scores are The Rio Times’ own weekly read. This is editorial analysis, not investment advice.
View original source — Rio Times ↗
