Markets
Key Facts
—The month. The peso gained 7.4% against the dollar in June, according to Bancolombia, its largest single-month rise in roughly ten years.
—The context. It was the best-performing emerging-market currency over the month, extending a rally we reported reaching a five-year high in mid-June.
—The trigger. Analysts tie the June surge to the 21 June election of President-elect Abelardo de la Espriella, read by markets as more business-friendly.
—The supports. High local interest rates, a weaker dollar, firm oil prices and strong remittances all pushed the same way.
—The catch. A stronger peso helps importers and travellers but squeezes coffee, flower and oil exporters, who earn fewer pesos per dollar.
The Colombian peso did not just reach a milestone in June; it posted its biggest single-month advance against the dollar in about a decade.
We reported in mid-June that the currency had climbed to a five-year high and become the strongest performer in the emerging world. The full monthly figures now put a sharper number on that run.
The distinction between the two readings matters. The five-year-high headline described a level, a point on a chart; the decade-best figure describes a speed, how much ground the currency covered in a single month.
By Bancolombia’s count, the peso gained seven and four tenths of a percent over the month. That is the currency’s best monthly showing in roughly ten years, and it led every other emerging-market peer for June.
One-stop reference
Company Intelligence
Every listed company in Latin America — financials, ownership and structure for 1,450+ companies across 26 exchanges, in one place.
Browse the directory → Colombia listings →
What pushed the Colombian peso so far, so fast
The single biggest new factor was politics. Colombia elected a president on 21 June, and markets read the result as pointing to a more business-friendly government.
Currencies often move on the expectation of a policy shift long before any new leader is sworn in. This was a textbook case of that reflex.
Investors had spent the spring braced for the opposite outcome, and several had positioned against the peso. When the vote went the other way, those bets had to be unwound, which added its own upward push to the currency.
Around that political spark, the same supports we flagged earlier kept working. Colombia’s high interest rate makes holding pesos lucrative, and a globally weaker dollar lifted the whole emerging-market group.
Firm oil prices meant more export dollars, and money sent home by Colombians abroad added a steady inflow. All four leaned in the same direction at once.
What sets a decade record apart from a strong month is the pace. When four supports align and a political catalyst lands in the same window, the move compresses into weeks rather than spreading across a year.
That is also what makes such records fragile. A gain assembled quickly from several independent forces can come apart if even one of them reverses.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Colombian peso rally safe to trust?
History counsels caution. As recently as May, this same currency was the worst performer in its peer group, and some banks were advising clients to bet against it.
A rally built on an election result and a soft dollar can unwind as quickly as it formed. Several of the supports, especially oil and global rates, sit entirely outside Colombia’s control.
There is a domestic counter-current too. Our reporting this week showed foreign direct investment still falling, which means the peso’s strength rests more on short-term financial flows than on long-term money committing to the country.
Who wins and who loses from a strong Colombian peso?
Importers and travellers win. A cheaper dollar lowers the peso cost of machinery, medicine and imported goods, and it makes foreign holidays more affordable.
Exporters lose. Coffee growers, flower farms and oil producers are paid in dollars but spend in pesos, so every dollar now converts into fewer of them.
For an expat earning dollars and spending pesos in Colombia, the shift is unwelcome. The same salary stretched noticeably further a year ago than it does today.
A stronger peso is, in effect, a quiet pay cut for anyone living on foreign income. Rent, restaurants and groceries priced in pesos all cost more in dollar terms than they did before the rally.
What should a foreign investor watch on the Colombian peso now?
The handover of power in August, and the incoming government’s first economic signals. Markets have priced in a friendlier stance; the new administration now has to deliver something that justifies it.
Beyond that, the same external levers that drove June. If the dollar firms or oil slips, the record month could look less like a turning point and more like a peak.
View original source — Rio Times ↗



