Rio Times Global Economy Briefing
The Big Three
Wall Street drifts near peak as investors weigh tariff threat and earnings U.S. equity futures are little changed, with the S&P 500 consolidating near 7,480 after a five-day slip from its record, while new U.S. tariff proposals for the EU and Mexico from August 1 inject fresh uncertainty into global trade and risk appetite.
Oil stabilises in low-80s, offering a cautious inflation breather for LatAm Brent crude futures traded around US$83 per barrel, well off the April peak above US$117 and the May spike above US$120, as rising supply forecasts ease energy costs for net importers like Brazil, though prices remain high enough to keep central banks cautious on rate cuts.
Brazil’s Selic steady at 14.25% as markets await service sector data With the Brazilian real firming to around BRL5.10 per U.S. dollar, investors turn their focus to today’s service sector growth data, expected to moderate, to gauge whether the central bank’s cautious easing cycle can continue smoothly without stoking inflation.
S&P 500 future
7,483.23
-0.22%
Futures slip from record; real yields anchor mood
10y U.S. Treasury
4.575%
+1.2 bps
Yield edges up ahead of Fed speeches, home sales data
Brent crude
82.97
-0.3%
Eases on supply outlook; supports Brazilian inflation outlook
U.S. Dollar Index (DXY)
104.68
+0.05%
Stable greenback keeps EM FX focused on local stories
USD/BRL
5.1046
-0.35%
Real strengthens marginally ahead of domestic data
Brazil Bovespa
132,519
+0.34%
Local equities firm; service sector health is the next test
Peru GDP (Q2 flash)
3.2% y/y
N/A
Growth moderates from 3.7%; in line with consensus
Colombia Retail Sales
11.2% y/y
N/A
Cooling from 14.9% previous; consumption losing momentum
United States
Indicator
Actual
Prior
Verdict
S&P 500 futures
7,483.23
7,509.88 prior close
Consolidation near highs as tariff and Fed risks weigh
10y Treasury yield
4.575%
4.563% prior close
Muted move as market awaits home sales and Fed comments
U.S. Dollar Index
104.68
104.63
Stable, giving no clear direction signal for EM currencies
Fed Musalem Speech (late Tue)
Dovish-leaning
N/A
Comments on labour market cooling reinforce gradualist Fed narrative
Europe & United Kingdom
Indicator
Actual
Prior
Verdict
STOXX 600
Down 1.8% weekly
N/A
Europe lags on geopolitical tension and tariff threats
DAX
Down 2.8% weekly
N/A
Cyclical industrial exposure increases vulnerability to trade war risk
FTSE 100
Down 1.7% weekly
N/A
Global risk aversion and strong sterling weigh on UK large caps
Asia-Pacific & Emerging Markets
Indicator
Actual
Prior
Verdict
Japan Foreign Bond Inv.
-218.1 prev
N/A
Watch for major outflow shifts affecting U.S. Treasury demand
Colombia Ind. Prod.
1.3% y/y (est)
2.0% prior
Industrial growth seen slowing, mirroring regional deceleration
Peru Unemployment
5.3% (prev)
N/A
Labour market remains tight; key for BCRP policy outlook
Brazil Service Sector
1.2% m/m (prev)
1.9% prior read
Moderation expected; crucial for assessing domestic demand strength
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Today’s Economic Calendar — Wednesday, July 15, 2026
Time
Country
Event
Consensus
Prior
01:30
CN
House Price Index
-3.4
-3.5
02:00
CN
Gross Domestic Product
0.9
1.3
02:00
CN
Industrial Production
4.6
4.5
02:00
CN
NBS Press Conference
—
—
02:00
CN
Gross Domestic Product
4.5
5
02:00
CN
Unemployment Rate
5.1
5.1
02:00
CN
GDP Growth Rate
4.5
5
02:00
CN
GDP Growth Rate
0.9
1.3
02:00
CN
Retail Sales
-0.1
-0.6
02:00
CN
Fixed Asset Investment
-4.9
-4.1
02:00
CN
Industrial Capacity Utilization
74
73.6
04:30
JP
Tertiary Industry Index
0.4
1.3
09:30
DE
30-Year Bund Auction
—
3.49
11:00
US
MBA Mortgage Refinance Index
—
794.4
11:00
US
MBA Mortgage Market Index
—
266.3
11:00
US
MBA Mortgage Applications
—
-2.2
11:00
US
MBA 30-Year Mortgage Rate
—
6.58
11:00
US
MBA Purchase Index
—
169.5
Live Market IntelligenceGlobal Markets — Live BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Global Markets — Live Board
World
Jul 15, 2026 · 03:13
S&P 500 · benchmark
7,544
+0.38%
Market breadth · 15 names
93% advancing
14 ▲ advancing1 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
EUR / USD
1.1444
+0.17%
US 10-yr
4.5850
-0.52%
VIX
16.50
-3.85%
Gold
4,041
-0.50%
Brent crude
85.37
+0.76%
Full instrument board
InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
SPX
7,544
+0.38%
—
—
—
—
—
NDX
29,586
+1.10%
—
—
—
—
—
DJI
52,508
+0.02%
—
—
—
—
—
RUT
2,965
+0.39%
—
—
—
—
—
US10Y
4.5850
-0.52%
—
—
—
—
—
VIX
16.50
-3.85%
—
—
—
—
—
DAX
25,147
+0.13%
—
—
—
—
—
FTSE
10,529
+0.30%
—
—
—
—
—
CAC
8,367
+0.03%
—
—
—
—
—
STOXX
642.10
+0.17%
—
—
—
—
—
NIKKEI
68,532
+1.16%
—
—
—
—
—
HSI
24,726
+1.58%
—
—
—
—
—
KOSPI
7,294
+6.38%
—
—
—
—
—
CSI300
4,824
+0.57%
—
—
—
—
—
NIFTY
24,202
+0.62%
—
—
—
—
—
TSX
35,321
+0.19%
—
—
—
—
—
GOLD
4,041
-0.50%
+21.36%
4,061
4,069
4,028
21,461
SILVER
58.89
+0.19%
+55.64%
58.77
59.41
58.45
4,018
Largest moves today
KOSPI
7,294
+6.38%
VIX
16.50
-3.85%
HSI
24,726
+1.58%
NIKKEI
68,532
+1.16%
NDX
29,586
+1.10%
NIFTY
24,202
+0.62%
CSI300
4,824
+0.57%
US10Y
4.5850
-0.52%
The session read
The S&P 500 rose 0.38%, with breadth positive — 14 of 15 names higher. KOSPI led, while GOLD lagged.
01 A quiet pause as Latin America checks its economic pulse
Global economy — Global markets are in a holding pattern on Wednesday, with U.S. stock futures pointing to a flat open as the S&P 500 digests a modest losing streak near its record high. The calm is deceptive; hovering behind the steady tape is a new U.S. threat to impose tariffs of up to 30% on EU and Mexican imports from 1 August, a risk that keeps global growth and corporate earnings forecasts under a cloud, with direct read-through to Mexico’s peso and Brazil’s export-sensitive sectors.
In Latin America, the morning is busy with hard data. Colombia reported moderating retail sales and industrial production, signalling that domestic demand is cooling alongside global trade, while Peru confirmed GDP growth of 3.2% year-on-year, a slight deceleration from the previous quarter that keeps its central bank in wait-and-see mode. These prints reinforce a continent-wide narrative of an economic expansion that is losing the blistering pace of the post-pandemic rebound.
All eyes now turn to Brazil’s service sector growth data, due at midday, with the prior monthly reading of 1.2% expected to come in lower. For an economy where services dominate activity, any significant slowdown would challenge the narrative of resilient domestic demand and could firm up bets that the Central Bank of Brazil will need to extend its cautious 25-basis-point easing cycle well into 2027, a prospect that is currently providing strong support for the Brazilian real hovering near BRL5.10.
02 The Fed’s quiet week and the long shadow of US tariffs
A raft of Federal Reserve speeches on Wednesday, from officials Schmid, Logan and Jefferson, is the main macro event for global markets, with investors parsing every word for clues on the timing of the first rate cut. Late Tuesday, Fed Governor Musalem struck a slightly dovish tone, noting cooling labour market conditions, which slightly reinforced expectations for a move this year, yet the 10-year Treasury yield remains stubbornly high around 4.58%, keeping global financial conditions tight.
The bigger immediate shock for emerging markets is trade policy, not monetary policy. The White House’s floated plan for punitive tariffs on European and Mexican goods from 1 August has reintroduced a risk premium in Latin American assets, particularly the Mexican peso, which is the most liquid EM proxy for regional trade risk. For Brazil, a full-blown trade war would dent global growth and demand for commodity exports, partially offsetting the domestic benefits of a strong real and falling oil prices.
The dollar index is flat at 104.7, providing a neutral backdrop, which means the Brazilian real’s recent strength to around BRL5.10 per dollar is genuinely a function of local factors. The massive 14.25% Selic rate and the current account’s improvement from cheaper oil are creating a virtuous, but fragile, cycle for the currency that keeps imported inflation in check and gives the central bank room for further moderate rate cuts without destabilising expectations.
03 Cheaper oil and China’s steady hand lift the LatAm outlook
Brent crude’s decline to near US$83 per barrel, a dramatic fall from the US$120-plus spikes seen earlier in the year, is a major disinflationary force flowing straight into the Latin American macro outlook. For Brazil, a net importer of refined products, persistent low-80s oil directly reduces Petrobras’s pressure to adjust domestic fuel prices upward and keeps a lid on transportation costs, effectively acting as a silent rate cut for the consumer.
China’s overnight data flow showed a solid 5.2% GDP growth rate in the second quarter, yet a miss on retail sales underlines that the recovery remains lopsided towards industrial production and exports. For Latin America’s commodity exporters, this is the ‘Goldilocks-lite’ scenario—demand for iron ore and soybeans is stable, not booming, but sufficient to prevent a collapse in export revenues, while weak Chinese consumption limits the upside for global energy prices, indirectly benefiting importers.
The convergence of these factors—moderating oil, a stable Fed outlook, and a China that is not crashing—creates a uniquely supportive macro environment for Latin America in the second half of 2026. The critical risk is whether U.S. trade policy disrupts this equilibrium. A 30% tariff wall hitting Mexico from 1 August would immediately ripple through integrated North American supply chains, hitting manufacturing confidence and potentially dragging down the Bovespa, which remains highly correlated with global risk appetite despite Brazil’s domestic strengths.
What to watch today and this week
Thursday: U.S. retail sales and jobless claims are the week’s marquee data; any upside surprise in consumption could send yields higher and pressure the Brazilian real by narrowing the carry trade advantage.
Friday: Brazil’s retail sales data hits, with consensus expecting a sharp rebound from the prior contraction, testing the thesis that domestic demand can withstand double-digit interest rates.
Saturday: Argentina’s budget balance for July is due; a widening deficit could destabilise the parallel peso and spill over into Mercosur trade sentiment.
Ongoing: U.S. tariff rhetoric towards the EU and Mexico before the mooted 1 August deadline remains the largest asymmetric risk for Latin American export-oriented equities and currencies.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are U.S. stocks stalling near record highs?
After a blistering 18% rally year-to-date, the S&P 500 is trading on expensive valuations and has slipped for five straight days. The stall reflects growing caution over new U.S. tariff threats and uncertainty over when the Federal Reserve will begin its easing cycle.
What is the current Brazilian Selic rate and the outlook?
The Selic rate stands at 14.25% after three consecutive 25-basis-point cuts since March, down from a peak of 15%. High real interest rates continue to support the Brazilian real, and markets expect a very gradual easing path given inflation expectations that remain above the 3% target.
How does cheap oil help Brazil?
With Brent falling to the low US$80s from highs above US$120, Brazil’s imported inflation drops significantly. Lower fuel costs ease pressure on Petrobras pricing, improve the current account balance, and give the central bank more flexibility to cut rates without stoking inflation.
Why are proposed U.S. tariffs on Mexico important for Latin America?
Tariffs up to 30% on Mexican goods from 1 August threaten to disrupt deeply integrated North American supply chains. Such a move would hurt Mexican asset prices, dampen regional growth sentiment, and trigger a risk-off move that could weaken the Brazilian real even if Brazil’s domestic fundamentals remain solid.
What does China’s GDP data mean for the region?
China grew 5.2% in the second quarter, but weak retail sales suggest a recovery driven more by industry than consumers. For Latin America, this translates to steady, not spectacular, demand for commodities such as copper and soy, providing a stable but unexciting revenue stream for exporters.
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