Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Mexico's Quiet Standoff: A Steady Peso, Softer Dollar, And A Market Catching Its Breath


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Mexico woke up to a market in pause mode. The peso hovered near 18.38 per dollar as the U.S. Dollar Index steadied in the high-97s after several down days.

That matters because a softer, calmer dollar usually helps emerging markets-and it did, up to a point. Mexico's main equity gauge, the S&P/BMV IPC, still slipped 1.57% on Wednesday to 61,929.72, a tidy reminder that local forces now share the driver's seat.

The simple story: the easy wins from a weakening dollar are fading. The deeper story: Mexico is juggling three moving parts at once.

First, interest rates. Banxico trimmed its policy rate to 7.50% late last month-supportive for growth, but it trims the peso 's famous carry appeal. Second, the 2025 budget mix.

Stronger tax collection helps, yet weaker oil output and Pemex's strain keep investors guarded. Third, politics. President Claudia Sheinbaum's high approval sustains expectations for social spending, while security and execution risks remain under watch.



Add in the global backdrop: a U.S. government shutdown has frozen key data, draining the calendar of catalysts and narrowing intraday ranges. With fewer headlines to trade, Mexico's assets are drifting on fundamentals and technicals rather than big macro shocks.

Under the surface, Wednesday's breadth was poor-only three IPC names rose. Top winners were Orbia Advance (+5.6%), La Comer (+1.3%), and Genomma Lab (+0.5%).

The laggards told the mood: Kimberly-Clark de México (−4.2%), Volaris (−3.4%), Banco del Bajío (−3.4%), FEMSA (−2.9%), and Grupo México (−2.2%).



Technically, USD/MXN's daily trend still leans gently lower, but short-term momentum has turned up; think range trading around 18.30–18.55 unless the dollar swings.

For equities, the IPC's bigger trend remains upward, with 61,000–60,900 as first support and 62,900–63,200 as resistance.

What to watch next: whether Banxico 's“measured” easing coexists with sticky core inflation; any Pemex or budget signals that shift sovereign risk; and the dollar's next move once U.S. data resumes.

Until then, Mexico sits in a quiet standoff-resilient currency, cautious stocks, and a market waiting for the next true nudge.

MENAFN02102025007421016031ID1110140551



Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.