Key Facts
The COLCAP fell 0.75 percent to 2,269 on June 30. That was a loss of about 17 points on the day.
Colombia’s central bank raised its main interest rate by three-quarters of a point to 12 percent.
The move resumed a tightening cycle the bank had paused in April.
Higher rates weigh on shares but tend to support the peso.
The index sits about 2 percent below its early-June post-election high near 2,320, by The Rio Times’ calculation.
Inflation near 5.5 percent remains well above the bank’s 3 percent target.
Today’s Focus
All eyes in Bogota were on the central bank, and it delivered the harder of the two options. A larger-than-token rate rise reminded investors that Colombia’s fight with inflation is far from over.
Shares slipped in response, as they usually do when borrowing costs climb. Yet the same decision that pressures the stock market quietly strengthens the currency underneath it.
01 A rate rise, not a pause
The central bank lifted its benchmark rate by three-quarters of a percentage point to 12 percent. It was a clear signal that policymakers are not yet satisfied that inflation is under control.
The bank had held rates steady at its April meeting, so this marks a return to the increases seen earlier in the year. Inflation running near 5.5 percent, well above the 3 percent goal, gave the board its reason.
Markets had leaned toward some kind of increase, so the direction was no great shock. The size of the step, though, underlined how stubborn Colombia’s price pressures have proved.
02 Why shares slipped
The stock market’s reaction followed a familiar logic. When a central bank raises rates, safe government bonds and savings accounts start to pay more, which pulls money away from shares.
Higher rates also lift borrowing costs for companies, squeezing the profits that support share prices. So even a widely expected rise tends to leave the equity market a little lower.
The fall was modest rather than dramatic, a sign the decision was largely anticipated. Colombia’s index has spent recent weeks consolidating, and this was another soft session rather than a sharp break.
03 The peso side of the coin
What hurts shares can help the currency. Higher Colombian rates make the peso more attractive to foreign investors hunting for better returns, which tends to lift its value.
A firmer peso matters because it helps hold down the cost of imported goods, easing one source of the very inflation the bank is fighting. It is the quiet upside of a painful decision.
The politics have helped too. Since the election of president-elect Abelardo de la Espriella, the market has been calmer and Colombia’s perceived risk has fallen, giving the bank room to focus on the economics.
Assessment — a necessary squeeze with a currency payoff MEDIUM
The rate rise is a headwind for equities in the short run, but it buys credibility in the inflation fight and props up the peso. The stock market‘s mild reaction suggests investors see it as prudent rather than alarming.
04 A region pulling apart
Colombia’s move stands out against its neighbours. While Bogota is raising rates to tame inflation, Brazil is cautiously cutting its own, a contrast that shows how differently the region’s economies are travelling.
That divergence shapes where global money flows. Investors weigh Colombia’s higher returns and firmer currency against the growth other markets may offer as their rates come down.
For now, the calmer post-election mood keeps Colombia in reasonable standing. The index remains well above its levels from a year ago, even after easing from its early-June peak.
05 The session in numbers
Measure
Level
Change
Read
COLCAP
2,269
−0.75%
Eased on the rate rise
Policy interest rate
12.00%
+0.75 pt
Tightening resumes
US dollar (COP)
~3,390
peso firm
Higher rates support it
From early-June high
~2,320
−2%
Consolidating
Inflation
~5.5%
—
Above the 3% target
Currency cells are signed by the direction of the local currency: a stronger peso shows green, a weaker peso red, whichever way the dollar quote moves. The rate cell shows the size of the increase, with red marking a tightening that weighs on shares.
Live Market IntelligenceColombia — Live Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Colombia — Live Market Board
BVC · Bogotá
Jul 1, 2026 · 04:08
MSCI COLCAP · benchmark
2,269.08
-0.75%
L 9.02day rangeH 9.05
Market breadth · 9 names
67% advancing
6 ▲ advancing3 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / COP
3,393
-1.47%
Brent crude
72.97
+0.07%
WTI crude
69.51
+0.01%
Sector heatmap · average move today
Mining
+2.48%
BUENAVENTURA
Industrials
+1.30%
TECNOGLASS
Other
+1.18%
BRENT, WTI, SOUTHERN COPPER
Financials
+0.01%
BANCOLOMBIA, GRUPO AVAL, CREDICORP
Energy
-2.20%
ECOPETROL
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
172,024
-0.68%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
66,967
-1.00%
S&P IPSAChile
10,840
+0.72%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,168,608
-0.26%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,269.08
-0.75%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
55,499.07
+1.21%
Full instrument board
InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
COLCAP
2,269.08
-0.75%
—
9.04
9.05
9.02
4,133
USD/COP
3,393
-1.47%
-17.01%
3,443
3,414
3,392
—
BRENT
72.97
+0.07%
+8.73%
72.92
73.52
72.93
1,818
WTI
69.51
+0.01%
+6.20%
69.50
70.19
69.44
10,240
ECOPETROL
14.24
-2.20%
+60.00%
14.56
14.75
14.11
2,378,040
BANCOLOMBIA
79.43
-0.48%
+73.73%
79.81
80.30
77.94
296,175
GRUPO AVAL
5.06
-0.76%
+79.00%
5.10
5.11
4.91
203,031
TECNOGLASS
46.81
+1.30%
-38.38%
46.21
47.11
45.15
338,045
CREDICORP
389.58
+1.26%
+74.99%
384.74
394.26
385.00
374,734
BUENAVENTURA
29.29
+2.48%
+78.60%
28.58
29.56
28.45
961,406
SOUTHERN COPPER
174.26
+3.45%
+76.90%
168.45
174.95
170.56
1,301,183
Largest moves today
SOUTHERN COPPER
174.26
+3.45%
BUENAVENTURA
29.29
+2.48%
ECOPETROL
14.24
-2.20%
USD/COP
3,393
-1.47%
TECNOGLASS
46.81
+1.30%
CREDICORP
389.58
+1.26%
GRUPO AVAL
5.06
-0.76%
COLCAP
2,269.08
-0.75%
The session read
The MSCI COLCAP eased 0.75%, with breadth positive — 6 of 9 names higher. Mining led, while Energy lagged.
06 What to watch next
The central question is how much higher rates need to go. The bank will keep leaning on the next inflation readings, and any sign that price growth is finally cooling would let it ease off.
The incoming government’s approach to a stretched budget is the other big factor. Heavy public debt has been one of the reasons the bank has kept policy tight, so credible fiscal plans could change the calculus.
For the stock market, the near-term path runs through the peso and the global mood toward emerging markets. The strong post-election surge has faded into consolidation, and the next clear move likely waits on the inflation numbers.
07 Connected coverage
For the prior session, see It’s Official: Colombia Certifies De la Espriella as President-Elect. For the wider picture, see the Global Economy Briefing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where did Colombia’s COLCAP close on June 30, 2026?
The COLCAP fell 0.75 percent to 2,269 points, a drop of about 17 points. The move came on the day the central bank raised interest rates.
What did Colombia’s central bank do?
It lifted its main interest rate by three-quarters of a point to 12 percent, resuming the increases it had paused in April. The bank is still trying to force stubbornly high inflation back toward its target.
Why did shares fall when rates rose?
Higher interest rates make safe government bonds and savings more rewarding, which pulls money away from shares. They also raise borrowing costs for companies, so a rate rise usually weighs on the stock market even when it is expected.
Is the higher rate all bad news?
Not entirely. Higher rates tend to strengthen the peso by attracting foreign money and holding down import prices, and the calmer politics since the election have lowered Colombia’s perceived risk.
What comes next for Colombian stocks?
The market will watch whether inflation finally cools enough to let the bank stop raising rates, and how the incoming government handles a stretched budget. The index is still digesting its strong post-election surge from early June.
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