Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Mexico's Peso Steadies As Stronger Dollar Tests Rate Shield Banamex Saga Shadows Stocks


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) The Mexican peso opened Wednesday near 18.41 per dollar, holding a tight 18.39–18.44 range even as the U.S. Dollar Index firmed toward 98.9.

Local equities were softer into the session after the S&P/BMV IPC slipped 0.31% Tuesday to 60,215.75. The tension is simple: a sturdier global dollar is pushing one way; Mexico's still-high interest-rate cushion is pushing the other.

The story behind the story is about resilience versus headlines. Globally, a firmer greenback-helped by Asia policy surprises and ongoing risk nerves-tends to nudge USD/MXN higher.

At home, Banxico 's late-September cut to 7.50% still leaves Mexico with one of the more attractive real-rate profiles in emerging markets, which has repeatedly capped rallies above the mid-18s. That rate shield is why the peso can look calm while the dollar is bouncing.



Stocks tell the domestic subplot. The long-running sale of Citi's Banamex has become a market barometer, pulling financials and Grupo México into the spotlight and adding idiosyncratic swings to an index already sensitive to global currents.

For foreign investors, the iShares MSCI Mexico ETF closed Tuesday at 65.04 with 33.2 million shares outstanding and about $2.16 billion in assets-steady, not euphoric-heading into today.


USD/MXN Stuck in Range
Technicals back the stalemate. On the 4-hour chart, USD/MXN is pinned near its middle Bollinger band with momentum just positive: resistance clusters at 18.45–18.50, and a clean break would open 18.60–18.65.

Support sits at 18.38/18.35, then 18.30. On the daily chart, the pair remains below the Ichimoku cloud and under a falling long-term average, keeping the medium-term bias modestly MXN-friendly even as short-term dollar strength ebbs and flows.

What to watch next: the 18.45–18.50 ceiling in USD/MXN, the tone of the Dollar Index, and any fresh Banamex headlines. Barring a larger dollar surge or a clear softening in U.S. data, Mexico's rate cushion argues for more range than rupture.

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