Key Facts
What the world’s markets decided: the semiconductor rally cracked after its two-day run, with US chip stocks reversing hard (SMH −5.40%) as Micron led a wave of profit-taking. But this was a rotation, not a rout, as financials rallied (XLF +2.18%) and Meta jumped +8.81% on plans to sell spare AI computing power.
Korea was hammered: the memory-chip selloff hit hardest in Seoul, where Samsung fell −7.00% and the KOSPI −4.57% on a US price-fixing lawsuit and reports of Apple lobbying to buy chips. Together Samsung and SK Hynix make up nearly half the index.
Money rotated back to banks: as chips and industrials fell, US financials surged and defensives firmed, a swap out of expensive growth and into steadier value. Microsoft +3.02% and Apple +1.73% rose even as Nvidia and Broadcom slipped.
Commodities were mixed: oil fell −2.98% and copper −1.35% while gold rose +0.60%, a mix that pressures the region’s energy names but lifts its haven appeal.
What it means for Latin America: the rotation into banks steadied the region, with Brazil dipping just −0.20% to 171,689 and Mexico rising +0.41%. The offsets were a weaker real at 5.21 and softer oil, both nudged by Fed talk that “prices are too high.”
The semiconductor rally that left Latin America behind for two days finally cracked, and investors moved their money straight into the bank stocks that fill Brazil’s index. For the LatAm pre-open, that rotation is a relief, even as a weaker real and a sharp drop in oil keep the mood cautious.
01 The semiconductor rally cracked, and the rotation favored Brazil
The LatAm pre-open story today is a sharp reversal in the semiconductor rally, and for once it works in the region’s favor. As investors fled chip stocks and moved into banks, Brazil steadied and Mexico rose.
The reversal in semiconductors was violent. US chip stocks dropped (SMH −5.40%) as Micron led a wave of profit-taking after the group tripled in the second quarter, dragging the Nasdaq −0.66%.
But the money did not leave the market, it moved. Financials surged (XLF +2.18%) and Meta jumped +8.81% on plans to sell spare AI computing power, so the S&P slipped only −0.22%.
That rotation is friendlier to Latin America than the past two days. Its indexes are heavy with the banks that led the US rally, so the region held up far better than during the semiconductor-led surge.
Korea showed the other side of the trade. Samsung crashed −7.00% and the KOSPI −4.57% on a US memory price-fixing lawsuit and reports of Apple lobbying to buy chips, the sharpest drop in Asia.
Commodities gave the region a mixed hand. Oil fell −2.98% and copper −1.35%, a drag on its energy and mining names, though gold rose +0.60% as a haven bid returned.
The catch was in the currencies. Fed Chair Warsh’s comment that “prices are too high” lifted US yields, pushing the real to 5.21 and reminding the region that rate worries have not gone away.
02 The mood dashboard
What we measure
Reading
In plain terms
Fear gauge (the VIX)
16.59
Barely rose +0.85% — a rotation, not a broad scare.
The chip crack (US)
−5.40%
Semiconductors reversed hard after two days of gains.
Banks rallied (US)
+2.18%
Financials surged as money rotated out of chips.
Korea crashed (Samsung)
−7.00%
Samsung led the KOSPI down −4.57% as memory chips slid.
Brazil steadied (Bovespa)
171,689
Dipped only −0.20% as the bank rally cushioned it.
Commodities mixed (oil vs gold)
mixed
Oil fell −2.98% while gold rose +0.60%.
The dashboard’s headline is a rotation, not a panic. The fear gauge barely moved even as semiconductors crashed, because money swapped into banks rather than fleeing the market.
The most violent reading is Korea’s crash. Samsung’s −7.00% drop shows how a market built on two memory giants can be hit far harder than the broad selloff.
The friendliest reading for the region is Brazil’s steadiness. A bank-heavy market barely moved on a day the semiconductor rally fell apart, a sign the rotation is on its side.
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
Jul 2, 2026 · 03:56
Ibovespa · benchmark
171,689
-0.19%
+23.03% over 12 months
Market breadth · 4 names
25% advancing
1 ▲ advancing3 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / BRL
5.22
+0.30%
USD / MXN
17.54
-0.06%
USD / CLP
923.99
+0.06%
USD / COP
3,368
-1.80%
USD / ARS
1,489
-0.03%
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
171,689
-0.19%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
67,248
+0.42%
S&P IPSAChile
10,812
-0.26%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,121,855
-1.48%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,259.83
-0.41%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
55,499.93
+0.00%
Full instrument board
InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
IBOV
171,689
-0.19%
+23.03%
172,024
—
—
—
IPSA
10,812
-0.26%
—
10,840
10,909
10,810
—
IPC MEX
67,248
+0.42%
+16.32%
66,967
—
—
—
MERVAL
3,121,855
-1.48%
+53.70%
3,168,608
—
—
—
COLCAP
2,259.83
-0.41%
—
9.04
9.05
9.02
4,133
BVL PERÚ
55,499.93
+0.00%
—
—
—
—
—
USD/BRL
5.22
+0.30%
-4.32%
5.21
5.22
5.21
—
EUR/BRL
5.95
+0.88%
-7.57%
5.90
5.95
5.93
—
USD/MXN
17.54
-0.06%
-6.37%
17.56
17.56
17.51
—
USD/CLP
923.99
+0.06%
-0.45%
923.44
924.97
923.49
—
USD/COP
3,368
-1.80%
-16.40%
3,429
3,370
3,368
—
USD/PEN
3.42
-0.07%
-4.04%
3.42
3.42
3.41
—
USD/ARS
1,489
-0.03%
+21.95%
1,490
1,489
1,489
—
USD/UYU
40.12
+1.44%
+1.69%
39.55
40.12
40.12
—
USD/PYG
6,052
+1.57%
-23.09%
5,958
6,052
6,052
—
USD/BOB
6.85
+1.65%
+1.61%
6.74
6.85
6.85
—
USD/DOP
59.22
+0.94%
+0.37%
58.67
59.50
59.22
—
USD/CRC
451.40
+1.94%
-8.43%
442.82
451.40
451.40
—
Largest moves today
USD/CRC
451.40
+1.94%
USD/COP
3,368
-1.80%
USD/BOB
6.85
+1.65%
USD/PYG
6,052
+1.57%
MERVAL
3,121,855
-1.48%
USD/UYU
40.12
+1.44%
USD/DOP
59.22
+0.94%
EUR/BRL
5.95
+0.88%
The session read
The Ibovespa eased 0.19%, with breadth negative — 1 of 4 names higher. IPC MEX led, while MERVAL lagged.
03 The LatAm pre-open read: the rotation turns friendlier
The heart of the story is that the trade hurting Latin America finally reversed. For two days money chased semiconductors and left the region behind, but today it rotated back into banks.
Brazil is built for exactly this move. Its index is full of the lenders that led the US financials rally, so it dipped only −0.20% while Asia’s chip markets were hammered.
Mexico told the same story, rising +0.41% as the calmer, value-friendly mood helped. Both markets held up because the money leaving semiconductors found the steady shares they are full of.
The honest offset is in oil and the currency. Crude’s −2.98% drop pressures Petrobras, and a firmer dollar pushed the real to 5.21 after Fed talk lifted US yields.
The takeaway is a more balanced one than earlier this week. The semiconductor crash spared Brazil because the rotation favored banks, but softer oil and a weaker real keep the picture from being a clean win.
04 The wider world — who won and who lost
Market
Move
In plain terms
Indonesia (Jakarta)
+1.70%
Rose firmly, the day’s emerging-market standout.
Saudi Arabia (country fund)
+0.91%
Gained even as oil fell back.
Hong Kong (Hang Seng)
+0.90%
Rose as Chinese shares held firm.
India (Sensex)
+0.41%
Edged up, steady as ever.
Africa (regional fund)
+0.27%
Firmed slightly despite softer metals.
South Africa (country fund)
−0.73%
Eased as copper slipped.
Malaysia (country fund)
−1.08%
Fell with the softer Asian tech mood.
Russia (MOEX)
quiet
Walled off by sanctions, trading on its own clock.
The table shows a world that shrugged off the semiconductor crash outside Asia. Importers and financial-heavy markets from Indonesia to India rose, while the pain concentrated in the memory-chip names.
Latin America sat comfortably in the steadier group. Like the broader emerging world, it leaned on banks and domestic demand rather than the semiconductors that drove the selloff.
05 The gaps that tell the story
Comparison
Gap (points)
What it means
Meta (+8.81%) vs Nvidia (−1.25%)
+10.06
The mega-cap split — software soared, the chipmaker fell.
US financials XLF (+2.18%) vs US chips SMH (−5.40%)
+7.58
The rotation flipped — banks up, chips crashed.
Brazil EWZ (−0.93%) vs Korea EWY (−8.12%)
+7.19
Brazil’s fund held while Korea’s crashed.
Hong Kong (+0.90%) vs Korea KOSPI (−4.57%)
+5.47
The semiconductor crash was Korea’s, not all of Asia’s.
Microsoft (+3.02%) vs Broadcom (−2.23%)
+5.25
Software rose while chips fell.
The widest gap of all — Meta up nearly 9% while Nvidia slipped — captures the day’s rethink of the AI trade. Investors rewarded a plan to monetize AI while dumping the chipmakers that build it.
The Brazil-versus-Korea gap is the one that matters for the region. Brazil’s fund fell a fraction while Korea’s crashed 8%, a vivid picture of a bank-heavy market dodging a semiconductor storm.
06 The big picture: the rotation swings back to value
The deeper LatAm pre-open message from scanning the whole world is that the pendulum swung back. After two days of semiconductors pulling money from value, a chip crash sent it straight back into banks and steady shares.
That matters because the region’s fortunes track that pendulum. When money favors value and financials, Brazil holds firm, and today’s rotation was exactly that kind of day.
For now, the practical read is that the region has regained its footing. Brazil steadied and Mexico rose on a day global semiconductors fell apart, which is a resilient result.
The honest caveat is twofold — a sharp drop in oil and a weaker real. Cheaper crude trims Petrobras, and Fed talk of high prices lifted yields and pushed the dollar up against the region’s currencies.
The thing to watch is whether Korea’s semiconductor crash stays contained or spreads into a broader selloff. For now, the money leaving chips is helping the region more than hurting it.
07 What currencies are telling us
Currency
Now
Move
In plain terms
Dollar vs Brazilian real
5.21
+0.89%
Real weakened as oil fell and US yields rose.
Dollar vs Mexican peso
17.53
−0.17%
Peso firmed slightly as Mexico’s market rose.
Dollar vs Argentine peso
1,489
−0.03%
Flat — Argentina held steady.
Dollar vs Korean won
1,553
+0.15%
Won soft as Samsung crashed.
Dollar vs Indian rupee
94.97
−0.30%
Rupee firmed a little.
Euro vs dollar
1.1390
+0.11%
Euro steady in a quiet session.
Dollar vs Chilean peso
924
+0.06%
Flat as copper eased.
For the LatAm pre-open, currencies were the day’s real warning. The real weakened +0.89% to 5.21 as softer oil and firmer US yields combined against it.
The rest of the region was calmer. The Mexican peso even firmed as its market rose, so the pressure was concentrated on Brazil’s currency rather than the whole region.
08 Crypto and commodities — the clues after the stock market closes
What
Now
Move
In plain terms
Bitcoin
60,767
+1.27%
Climbed back above 60,000 with the risk rotation.
Ethereum
1,632
+1.44%
Rose, its firmest reading in days.
Oil (US crude proxy)
103.27
−2.98%
Fell hard — a headwind for Petrobras.
Gold
370.60
+0.60%
Rose as a haven bid returned.
Copper
37.22
−1.35%
Slipped, a mild drag on the region’s miners.
The commodity scan was a mixed hand for the region. Oil and copper both fell, pressuring its energy and mining names, while gold’s rise offered only indirect comfort.
Crypto, meanwhile, firmed. Bitcoin climbed back above 60,000 and Ethereum rose, a sign the day’s rotation carried a healthy dose of risk appetite.
09 What it means region by region
Brazil: São Paulo dipped just −0.20% to 171,689, holding steady even as semiconductors crashed worldwide because the bank rally that lifted US financials +2.18% plays to its strengths. Its US-listed fund eased −0.93% and the real weakened to 5.21 on softer oil, but the rotation back toward banks gives Brazil’s value-heavy market firmer footing.
Brazil reopens near its level, its bank-heavy market cushioned as money rotates out of semiconductors and back toward financials, though a weaker real and lower oil are the offsets.
Mexico: Mexico rose +0.41% to 67,248, recovering as the bank rally and calmer mood helped. Its US-listed fund was flat and the peso firmed slightly to 17.53.
Argentina: Argentina’s US-listed fund eased −0.21% in a quiet session. The local Merval reading remains unreliable on the feed because of a glitch, and the peso held near 1,489.
Beyond the Americas: The mood split — Indonesia +1.70%, Saudi Arabia +0.91% and India +0.41% rose, while Malaysia −1.08% and South Africa −0.73% fell. Russia’s MOEX, walled off by sanctions, traded quietly on its own clock.
Asia (Korea cracked): Korea was hammered as Samsung fell −7.00% and the KOSPI −4.57%, the sharpest drop in the region, with Japan −1.74% and Taiwan −0.87% also lower. But Hong Kong +0.90% rose, a sign the crash was concentrated in the memory-chip names rather than all of Asia.
10 What to watch through the day
Can banks keep cushioning Brazil? Financials rallied +2.18% as semiconductors fell — watch whether the rotation back toward banks steadies Brazil or the chip crash spreads.
Korea’s semiconductor crash: Samsung fell −7.00% and the KOSPI −4.57% — watch whether the memory-chip selloff stays in Korea or drags the wider semiconductor trade down again.
Oil’s drop: crude fell −2.98% — watch the pressure on Petrobras and the weaker real that came with it.
Meta and software: Meta jumped +8.81% while semiconductors fell — watch whether money keeps favoring software and financials over chip stocks.
Inflation and the Fed: Warsh said prices are “too high” — watch any fresh data that could lift the dollar further against the real.
Frequently Asked Questions
What did global markets decide overnight, in one sentence?
The semiconductor rally cracked — US chip stocks reversed hard (SMH −5.40%) and Korea was hammered (Samsung −7.00%, KOSPI −4.57%), but this was a rotation not a rout, as financials rallied (XLF +2.18%), Meta jumped +8.81% and Brazil steadied at −0.20% while Mexico rose.
Why did Brazil hold up while semiconductors crashed?
Because the money leaving chip stocks rotated into banks and financials, which are exactly what Brazil’s index is full of. A bank-heavy, value-leaning market benefits when investors swap expensive semiconductors for steady financials, so Brazil dipped only slightly.
Which global signal matters most for Latin America today?
The rotation from semiconductors back into financials. It is friendlier to Brazil’s bank-heavy market than the past two days of chip-led rallies, and it helped the region steady.
The offsetting worry is oil, whose −2.98% drop pressures Petrobras and helped push the real to 5.21.
What would change this picture?
A spread of Korea’s semiconductor crash into a broader global selloff would eventually pull even Brazil’s banks down. On the other side, steadier oil and a continued rotation into financials would let the region’s value market keep finding its footing.
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 July 2, 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 Wednesday, July 1, the live Asian session on Thursday, July 2, 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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