Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Mexican Markets Hold Momentum As Central Bank Signals And U.S. Data Define New Trends


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Mexico's markets closed Tuesday on a steady note after a volatile session defined by the peso's resilience and gains for the main equities index, supported by manufacturing exports, government budget plans, and muted inflation readings.

Data and official charts revealed the Mexican peso traded at 18.61 per U.S. dollar after moving narrowly since Monday. The S&P/BMV IPC index ended at 60,680 points after slight gains, led by export-linked sectors and financials.

The peso's stability followed Mexico's latest inflation report, which showed a slight uptick to 3.57% in August. The central bank's cautious tone did not surprise traders. Recent data reflected the country's ability to moderate inflation after persistent price pressures earlier this year.

Market participants acknowledged Banxico 's tighter guidance after forecasters noted the central bank faces a“tightrope” in managing inflation and supporting the economy.

Exporters drove the positive equity performance, highlighted by an 8.2% annual jump in Mexico's exports to the United States. Domestic manufacturing growth remained a bright spot, with large companies in auto and electronics sectors benefiting.

Investors also tracked news that officials proposed strict deficit controls in the 2026 budget while keeping funding for welfare. These measures reassured local debt markets but did not bring large inflows into Mexican ETFs.



Technical analysis of the S&P/BMV IPC index daily chart pointed to a persistent uptrend. The index traded above all significant moving averages, showing strong underlying momentum.

The Relative Strength Index hovered around 70, signaling overbought territory, while the MACD confirmed bullish sentiment, suggesting continued buying interest.

Bollinger Bands widened, reflecting higher volatility alongside record closing levels. In the last 24 hours, blue-chip stocks Grupo Bimbo and Cemex led gains, outperforming the index, while América Móvil and WalMex recorded the sharpest losses.

Global liquidity, traced by the yellow NDQ line on the charts, moved erratically during after-hours and Asian sessions but did not trigger major price swings.

The 4-hour chart confirmed these trends, showing short corrections within a broader upward channel and continued heavy trading in the largest equities.



The dollar index edged up to 95.00 during the night as traders awaited U.S. inflation reports and signals on Federal Reserve policy.

This added a brief headwind to emerging market currencies, but the peso 's modest movement reflected strong current account inflows and well-anchored inflation expectations.

Benchmarked against peers, the Mexican stock market performed in line with Brazil and outpaced Argentina, lifted by external demand and sound fiscal messaging. Official sources confirmed that volumes and turnover remained moderate.

Analysts stated that while fundamentals remain steady, markets remain alert to U.S. data and global policy changes that could disrupt positive trends.

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