Key Facts
Brent crude jumped to $79.02 a barrel up 3.96% on the session as renewed U.S.-Iran hostilities over the weekend reversed part of last week’s de-escalation trade, the single overnight input every Latin American desk must price first.
Wall Street closed Friday on a chip-driven high with the S&P 500 up 0.42% to 7,575.25 after SK Hynix’s $26.5 billion Nasdaq debut closed nearly 13% above its offer price, the kind of risk-on close that usually travels well into emerging markets.
Mexico’s and Colombia’s pesos firmed even as oil spiked with USD/MXN easing 0.49% to 17.46 and USD/COP dropping 3.09% to 3,240 on Friday’s board, an unusual disconnect from the classic crude-linked currency script.
Argentina’s Merval added 2.43% to 3,280,224 and Chile’s IPSA edged up 0.28% to 11,057 both grinding near recent highs while Mexico’s Mexbol rose a comparatively modest 0.55%, leaving the Southern Cone and Andean markets calmer than Brazil’s session.
The Ibovespa’s 2.97% leap was the loudest single print in the region but it sat inside a board where Brazil moved in step with a far smaller 0.42% gain on the S&P 500, a beta reading foreign desks will want to watch into today’s open.
Today’s Focus
Oil re-priced hard over the weekend as the Iran ceasefire frayed again, with Brent trading at $79.02 a barrel, up 3.96% on the day. That is the shared catalyst every desk in the region opens against this morning, before a single local number crosses the screen.
Wall Street’s Friday close leaned on chips rather than crude — the S&P 500 added 0.42% to 7,575.25 on the back of SK Hynix’s blockbuster Nasdaq listing, which closed nearly 13% above its offer price. Futures now have to absorb a weekend oil jump before that calm can carry through to Latin American opens.
The currency board split the difference: Mexico’s and Colombia’s pesos actually firmed against the dollar even as crude spiked, while Argentina’s peso barely moved near 1,487 and Brazil’s real held close to 5.11. That is not the textbook petro-currency reaction, and it tells desks the region is trading its own stories rather than one oil trade.
Equities split too. Argentina’s Merval and Chile’s IPSA pressed toward their own recent highs on modest single-digit gains, Mexico’s Mexbol barely moved, and Brazil’s Ibovespa posted the outsized print of the group at 2.97% — a region digesting a global shock unevenly rather than moving as one block.
What matters today. A near-4% overnight oil jump is hitting five Latin American markets in five different ways, with currencies decoupling from crude and Brazil carrying an outsized beta to a barely-positive Wall Street close.
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01 Latin American markets: the overnight tape
The weekend brought fresh U.S.-Iran hostilities that reopened the fear trade Wall Street had spent the prior session ignoring. Brent crude jumped to $79.02 a barrel, up 3.96%, reversing part of the relief that followed last week’s brief ceasefire chatter.
Friday’s close in New York had actually been calm and chip-led rather than oil-led: the S&P 500 rose 0.42% to 7,575.25, the Nasdaq Composite added 0.28% to 26,281.61 and the Dow gained 0.29%, all lifted by SK Hynix’s Nasdaq debut, which raised $26.5 billion and closed nearly 13% above its IPO price.
In Europe the picture was more cautious. The STOXX 600 closed flat on Friday, with Germany’s DAX off 0.1% and France’s CAC and the UK’s FTSE 100 each up around 0.2%, leaving the pan-European gauge on track for its steepest weekly loss since mid-April as investors reassessed the Middle East conflict’s economic reach.
Asian markets, by contrast, had advanced into Friday on a semiconductor rebound as investors refocused on the AI investment theme, even with the Iran tensions unresolved. Monday’s open finds thin, headline-driven liquidity typical of the start of the FX week, with EUR/USD near 1.1404 and USD/JPY pinned above 161.
Assessment — Diverging Currencies, Not a Regional Rally MEDIUM
The evidence points to a region pricing its own local catalysts over the shared oil shock: Mexico’s and Colombia’s pesos firmed rather than weakened against a stronger crude tape, Argentina’s peso and country-risk gauge stayed anchored near multi-year tights, and only Brazil’s index moved with real conviction relative to a subdued Wall Street gain. That pattern — calm currencies, split equities — reads as digestion rather than panic, but it leaves the tape vulnerable if Tuesday’s U.S. CPI print or a further Hormuz escalation forces a single direction on all five markets at once; the variable to watch is whether USD/COP’s 3.09% move and USD/MXN’s 0.49% move hold once Asian and European desks reprice the weekend oil headlines during the session.
02 The board before the open
Instrument
Level
Change
Read
Brent crude
$79.02/bbl
+3.96%
Iran tensions flare again over the weekend, the catalyst framing every open in the region
S&P 500 (Fri close)
7,575.25
+0.42%
Chip-led gain, a calmer tone than the overnight oil headlines suggest
USD/COP
3,240
−3.09%
Sharpest FX move on the board — the peso firming despite the crude jump
USD/MXN
17.46
−0.49%
Peso shrugging off the oil headlines, a soft-dollar read
USD/BRL
5.1075
−0.04%
Real barely moves, holding within its 52-week band
Ibovespa
177,866
+2.97%
One index among five — Brazil’s outsized Friday beta to Wall Street
The board tells a story of disconnection: the biggest overnight mover is oil, yet the region’s two most oil-sensitive currencies — the Colombian and Mexican pesos — actually strengthened into the weekend’s escalation.
That leaves the Ibovespa’s 2.97% Friday print looking like the outlier rather than the template, a single data point in a five-market mosaic that opens today pricing very different risks.
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 13, 2026 · 02:44
Ibovespa · benchmark
177,866
+2.97%
+30.07% over 12 months
Market breadth · 5 names
100% advancing
5 ▲ advancing0 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / BRL
5.11
-0.04%
USD / MXN
17.52
+0.29%
USD / CLP
923.90
-0.41%
USD / COP
3,242
-0.13%
USD / ARS
1,487
-0.03%
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
177,866
+2.97%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
66,496
+0.59%
S&P IPSAChile
11,057
+0.28%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,280,224
+2.43%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,307.67
+0.65%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
56,194.27
+1.29%
Full instrument board
InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
IBOV
177,866
+2.97%
+30.07%
172,742
—
—
—
IPSA
11,057
+0.28%
—
11,025
11,063
10,961
—
IPC MEX
66,496
+0.59%
+17.19%
66,107
—
—
—
MERVAL
3,280,224
+2.43%
+58.56%
3,202,490
—
—
—
COLCAP
2,307.67
+0.65%
—
9.04
9.05
9.02
4,133
BVL PERÚ
56,194.27
+1.29%
—
—
—
—
—
USD/BRL
5.11
-0.04%
-8.33%
5.11
5.11
5.11
—
EUR/BRL
5.82
-0.79%
-10.51%
5.87
5.83
5.82
—
USD/MXN
17.52
+0.29%
-6.09%
17.47
17.54
17.46
—
USD/CLP
923.90
-0.41%
-1.48%
927.69
927.24
921.96
—
USD/COP
3,242
-0.13%
-19.19%
3,246
3,248
3,242
—
USD/PEN
3.41
+0.44%
-2.01%
3.39
3.41
3.39
—
USD/ARS
1,487
-0.03%
+18.30%
1,488
1,487
1,487
—
USD/UYU
40.22
+1.37%
+0.77%
39.68
40.22
40.22
—
USD/PYG
6,055
+1.45%
-20.71%
5,968
6,055
6,055
—
USD/BOB
10.14
+4.01%
+50.17%
9.75
10.14
10.14
—
USD/DOP
58.61
+0.22%
-1.53%
58.48
58.66
58.48
—
USD/CRC
448.82
+1.41%
-8.82%
442.57
448.82
448.82
—
Largest moves today
USD/BOB
10.14
+4.01%
IBOV
177,866
+2.97%
MERVAL
3,280,224
+2.43%
USD/PYG
6,055
+1.45%
USD/CRC
448.82
+1.41%
USD/UYU
40.22
+1.37%
BVL PERÚ
56,194.27
+1.29%
EUR/BRL
5.82
-0.79%
The session read
The Ibovespa rose 2.97%, with breadth positive — 5 of 5 names higher. MERVAL led, while IPSA lagged.
03 What the data shows — small-cap miners led gainers while turnover concentrated in blue chips
Stock
Move
Turnover
Note
CMIN3
+8.3%
R$75m
Biggest percentage gainer, small-cap iron-ore miner riding the commodity bid
MGLU3
+7.4%
R$176m
Heaviest turnover among gainers — retail bellwether on a domestic recovery trade
CSNA3
+7.9%
R$77m
Steelmaker moved with the same iron-ore complex as CMIN3
PRIO3
−0.3%
R$378m
Heaviest-traded loser — the oil independent lagged despite the crude jump
VALE3
—
R$1,643m
Turnover leader of the entire board, more geared to Chinese demand than Brent
ITUB4
—
R$1,277m
Second-heaviest turnover, a bank proxy for the broad Friday rally
The scan shows a conviction gap: the day’s biggest percentage gainers — CMIN3, AURE3, CSNA3 — traded on turnover of R$51-77 million, while the real money sat in VALE3 at R$1,643 million and ITUB4 at R$1,277 million, names that barely register among the top percentage movers.
That split matters for foreign flows because it suggests Friday’s 2.97% Ibovespa gain was carried by the heaviest, most liquid names rather than a speculative small-cap chase, a healthier signal for anyone sizing positions into today’s open.
04 Brazil and the currencies
USD/BRL sits at 5.1075, down 0.04% on the day and still 8.6% below its 52-week high, a real that has shown little inclination to react to the overnight oil jump. That stability matters given today’s calendar: the Central Bank’s Focus market readout lands at 11:25 local time, followed by Business Confidence data expected at 46.3, down from 46.7 previously.
CFTC positioning data on both the real and the Mexican peso are due late today, a read foreign desks will use to gauge whether speculative flows have been adding to or trimming Latin American currency exposure after a strong run in Brazilian equities.
Against a backdrop where USD/COP fell 3.09% and USD/MXN eased 0.49% on Friday, the real’s near-flat print looks less like weakness and more like a currency that has already done its repricing — it remains 8.6% below its own 52-week high inside a 4.8909-5.5901 range, leaving room in both directions.
With the Ibovespa up 2.97% against a much smaller 0.42% gain on the S&P 500, the divergence signal flags Brazil trading in step with, but far more aggressively than, Wall Street — a pattern that tends to attract foreign inflows on the way up and amplify outflows on any reversal.
05 The regional setup
Index
Country
Change
Ibovespa
Brazil
+2.97%
Merval
Argentina
+2.43%
Mexbol
Mexico
+0.55%
COLCAP
Colombia
+0.65%
IPSA
Chile
+0.28%
Argentina’s Merval closed at 3,280,224, up 2.43%, with country risk on the JPMorgan EMBI gauge holding near an eight-year low as Economy Minister Luis Caputo’s debt plan continues to anchor foreign appetite for peso assets.
Colombia’s COLCAP added 0.65% to 2,307.67 even as the country’s presidential transition turned openly adversarial, with president-elect Abelardo De la Espriella suspending the handover process on July 7 amid dueling fraud claims with the Petro government — a political overhang that has so far failed to dent the index.
Chile’s IPSA, up a modest 0.28% to 11,057, remains the region’s laggard on a one-year view, still tracking copper prices as its main macro anchor rather than the oil headlines dominating elsewhere.
Mexico’s Mexbol rose 0.55% to a level roughly 7.2% below its 52-week high, the calmest of the five prints and a reminder that not every market in the region needed Friday’s chip rally or the weekend’s oil jump to hold steady.
06 The technical picture
The Ibovespa at 177,866 sits 10.5% below its 52-week high within a 132,129-198,657 range, and Friday’s two straight up sessions leave it testing whether the index can extend a rally built on liquid names rather than speculative ones.
Mexico’s Mexbol at 66,478 is 7.2% off its 52-week high inside a 60,216-71,601 band, a narrower and calmer technical picture than Brazil’s, consistent with Friday’s smaller 0.55% move.
Brent’s jump to $79.02 needs to be read against a market where the International Energy Agency has warned that prolonged Iran-linked tensions could delay the rebuilding of global oil inventories, keeping a geopolitical risk premium embedded in the price even after any near-term de-escalation.
The dollar itself enters the week on a mixed technical footing — Friday’s close near 100.76 on the DXY came after a three-day losing streak tied to Iran de-escalation hopes that the weekend’s events have now partly undone, a reminder that the currency backdrop for Latin American assets could shift quickly.
07 What to watch
US inflation: Tuesday’s Core CPI, seen at 0.3% versus 0.2% prior, alongside a headline Inflation Rate estimate of 3.9%, will shape Fed rate-path expectations that ripple straight into EM currency risk appetite.
Fed speakers: Four Federal Reserve officials — Bowman, Cook, Goolsbee and Barr — speak on Tuesday, a cluster of commentary that could move the dollar broadly and with it every Latin American currency pair.
China credit data: Tuesday’s New Loans, Total Social Financing and M2 releases feed directly into copper and iron-ore sentiment, with knock-on effects for Chile’s IPSA and Brazil’s Vale-heavy Ibovespa.
CFTC positioning: Today’s CFTC speculative net position data for the Brazilian real and Mexican peso will show whether fast money has been adding to or trimming exposure after last week’s currency moves.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Brent crude jump nearly 4% overnight?
Renewed U.S.-Iran hostilities over the weekend reversed part of the de-escalation trade from the prior week’s tentative ceasefire, pushing Brent to $79.02 a barrel, up 3.96% on the day.
Are Latin American currencies reacting to the oil spike in the usual way?
Not uniformly — Mexico’s and Colombia’s pesos firmed on Friday even as crude jumped, Argentina’s peso held flat near 1,487, and Brazil’s real was little changed near 5.11, a break from the classic petro-currency script.
What is Brazil’s key data point today?
The Central Bank’s Focus market readout is due at 11:25 local time, followed later by a Business Confidence release expected at 46.3, down from 46.7 previously.
Which index led the region on Friday and which lagged?
Brazil’s Ibovespa led with a 2.97% gain and Argentina’s Merval followed at 2.43%, while Chile’s IPSA was the laggard, up just 0.28%.
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