Rio Times · Latin America
Key Facts
—Argentina Delirious but bracing: beat Switzerland 3-1 in extra time, now face England for the first time ever, Wednesday in Atlanta.
—Brazil Money mood sours as Faria Lima frets over falling inflation while Brasília moves to strip Enel of São Paulo’s grid and freeze the bus market.
—Mexico Guarded hope from the Supreme Court’s justice roadshow collides with fear after an attack on a Morelos pre-candidate.
—Peru Institutional shock as the Constitutional Court strips Congress of its spending power, even as diplomats are told to go sell pisco.
—Colombia Pre-emptive dread builds ahead of Petro’s July 20 tax reform vote.
—Chile Quiet, methodical confidence as ports open to Argentina’s mining boom and Fred Perry bets on Santiago.
Latin America woke on July 12, 2026 caught between World Cup delirium and a string of very concrete institutional and economic jolts — euphoric in Buenos Aires, uneasy in São Paulo, watchful in Lima and Bogotá.
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The Continent’s Mood Today
Latin America’s pulse on July 12 was split cleanly down the middle: half the continent stayed up for Argentina’s 3-1 extra-time win over Switzerland, the other half was quietly digesting rulings and reforms that will outlast any football tournament.
Argentina’s passage to a World Cup semi-final against England sits alongside Peru’s top court stripping Congress of its spending power and Colombia bracing for a July 20 tax vote — proof that the region’s biggest stories this week are as much about power and money as about penalties and extra time.
Argentina – Delirium With a Deadline
Messi’s own words captured it best after the final whistle in Kansas City: “Siento mucha felicidad por el triunfo, un triunfo muy duro”, he said of the hard-fought 3-1 extra-time win over Switzerland that sent Argentina into the semi-finals for a second straight World Cup.
Wednesday’s opponent in Atlanta is England, and Messi called it a special semi-final, the third of his career and the first time he will face England in either an official or a friendly match, while Scaloni brushed off outside doubters by noting he has heard accusations that referees help Argentina since he was old enough to understand them.
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 · 02:43
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
Instrument
Last
Change
YoY
Prev.
High
Low
Volume
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.
From The Rio Times
Related coverage · 11 Jul 2026
Latin American Pulse for Saturday, July 11, 2026
Read →
Brazil – Money Mood Sours, Football Aches
Faria Lima, the country’s financial heart, is in a foul mood: it reacted with irritation to the surprise drop in June inflation, with the 12-month IPCA falling from 4.72% to 4.64%, opening the door to further rate cuts that squeeze banks’ and rentiers’ gains.
There is a football wound too — Spain beat Belgium and France beat Morocco to reach the semi-finals, leaving five-time champions Brazil to watch Argentina and England from the sidelines, a familiar sting for a footballing nation used to being the story, not the audience.
Mexico – Hope on Trial, Fear in Morelos
The mood among Mexico’s editorial writers was cautiously hopeful: the first stage of the Diálogos por la Justicia Abierta, led by Chief Justice Hugo Aguilar and touring five states with ministers Lenia Batres and colleagues, shows that listening to citizens strengthens institutional legitimacy — though trust will only return through timely rulings, not forums.
That hope sat uneasily beside fear after three suspects were detained over the attack on Yautepec pre-candidate Sandra Fernández in Morelos, under Governor Margarita González Saravia — arrests came, but calm did not; the rare bright spot was Baja California leading the country in formal job creation, over 76,000 new IMSS-registered posts in the first half of 2026, concentrated in Tijuana and Mexicali.
Peru – The Court That Cornered Congress
Lima’s political class is still absorbing the Constitutional Court’s ruling stripping Congress of its own spending power, a decision that reshapes who controls the purse strings just as the country’s copper-dependent economy takes a sharper hit from falling prices than neighbouring Chile.
Amid that shock, the Foreign Ministry’s push to enlist diplomats in selling more pisco abroad reads almost wistfully — a reminder that Peru’s soft-power charm offensive continues even as its institutions wrestle over hard power at home; for anyone holding Peruvian assets, the practical takeaway is that fiscal decisions may now move through the courts as much as through Congress.
Colombia – Counting Down to July 20
Bogotá’s mood on July 12 was one of pre-emptive dread, with businesses and foreign residents alike poring over what Gustavo Petro’s tax reform, due for a vote on July 20, would actually mean for their pay packets and portfolios.
The date carries symbolic weight — Colombia’s independence day — turning a fiscal vote into a test of political theatre as much as economics; foreigners with income or property in Colombia would do well to get advice before the 20th, not after.
Chile – Quiet Confidence, Careful Bets
While Peru absorbs a sharper copper shock, Chile’s mood is steadier: ports on the Pacific are opening to Argentina’s booming mining sector, a vote of confidence in Chilean logistics and stability.
That confidence is echoed by outsiders placing bets on the country — Spain’s Dominion naming Chile a priority growth market and British label Fred Perry choosing Santiago and Buenos Aires for its next stores — signs that, football aside, Chile is currently seen as the region’s safer harbour for capital.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is Argentina’s mood both euphoric and anxious right now?
Beating Switzerland 3-1 in extra time put Argentina into the World Cup semi-finals, but Wednesday’s match against England in Atlanta is a first-ever meeting for Messi, layering excitement with real nerves.
What does Peru’s Constitutional Court ruling mean for someone with money in Peru?
Stripping Congress of its spending power shifts fiscal control toward the courts, so watch judicial decisions, not just legislative votes, for signals on budgets and policy.
Is Brazil’s gloomy mood about the economy or football?
Both — falling inflation is squeezing bankers’ margins on Faria Lima just as Brazil watches Argentina, England, Spain and France play World Cup semi-finals without them.
Sources: CNN en Español – Argentina 3-1 Suiza, Excélsior – Frentes Políticos, 12 de julio de 2026, Jornal do Brasil – Home, La Jornada – Domingo 12 de julio de 2026
Companion: today’s Latin America Power Map (PDF) — our full daily dossier on who holds power across the region.
View original source — Rio Times ↗


