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Chile Markets Hold Their Nerve As Softer Dollar Meets Copper Tailwind
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Chile opens the day on a steadier footing. The peso trades around 959–960 per dollar and the S&P CLX IPSA sits a touch above 9,100.
The U.S. Dollar Index is softer near 98.5, a sign that investors are pricing a gentler path for U.S. policy into 2025. For an export-driven economy like Chile's, a calmer, weaker dollar typically eases pressure on the currency and nudges risk appetite higher.
The story behind the story is copper. Prices have been resilient this week, helped by a weaker dollar and supply-tightness chatter.
Because copper dominates Chile's terms of trade, even modest firmness can steady the peso and support domestic equities-so long as local news doesn't fight the tape.
At home, inflation's earlier surprise has already nudged the central bank into a more cautious stance, which keeps the currency from straying too far in either direction.
Technically, USD/CLP remains boxed in. On the 4-hour chart, momentum has turned slightly dollar-positive but remains shallow; on the daily chart, price sits on a knot of moving averages with a mid-range RSI.
That mix screams consolidation: 955–965 looks like the operative band unless something breaks. A sustained push above ~968 would target 975–980; a close below ~955 would reopen 948–950.
For equities, the IPSA's 4-hour structure has improved-prices riding short-term averages and the upper Bollinger band-while the daily trend is stabilizing. Holding roughly 8,950 keeps the near-term bias constructive toward 9,250–9,300.
Yesterday's leaders and laggards added texture to that view. Winners were led by PAZ (+3.08%), Banco de Crédito e Inversiones (+3.07%), Banco de Chile (+2.57%), Besalco (+2.53%), and CCU (+2.52%).
Losers included Cencosud (−2.79%), Cintac (−2.49%), Duncanfox (−1.92%), SM SAAM (−1.62%), and Camanchaca (−1.59%).
The pattern-banks and selected domestics up, some consumer and industrial names down-fits a market leaning cautiously optimistic but still picky about earnings visibility and input costs.
What to watch next is simple and decisive: the dollar index, copper headlines, and any fresh guidance from Chile's central bank.
If DXY drifts lower and copper holds, the peso likely stays firm within its range and equities extend a measured grind higher. A dollar rebound or copper wobble would cap that story quickly.
The U.S. Dollar Index is softer near 98.5, a sign that investors are pricing a gentler path for U.S. policy into 2025. For an export-driven economy like Chile's, a calmer, weaker dollar typically eases pressure on the currency and nudges risk appetite higher.
The story behind the story is copper. Prices have been resilient this week, helped by a weaker dollar and supply-tightness chatter.
Because copper dominates Chile's terms of trade, even modest firmness can steady the peso and support domestic equities-so long as local news doesn't fight the tape.
At home, inflation's earlier surprise has already nudged the central bank into a more cautious stance, which keeps the currency from straying too far in either direction.
Technically, USD/CLP remains boxed in. On the 4-hour chart, momentum has turned slightly dollar-positive but remains shallow; on the daily chart, price sits on a knot of moving averages with a mid-range RSI.
That mix screams consolidation: 955–965 looks like the operative band unless something breaks. A sustained push above ~968 would target 975–980; a close below ~955 would reopen 948–950.
For equities, the IPSA's 4-hour structure has improved-prices riding short-term averages and the upper Bollinger band-while the daily trend is stabilizing. Holding roughly 8,950 keeps the near-term bias constructive toward 9,250–9,300.
Yesterday's leaders and laggards added texture to that view. Winners were led by PAZ (+3.08%), Banco de Crédito e Inversiones (+3.07%), Banco de Chile (+2.57%), Besalco (+2.53%), and CCU (+2.52%).
Losers included Cencosud (−2.79%), Cintac (−2.49%), Duncanfox (−1.92%), SM SAAM (−1.62%), and Camanchaca (−1.59%).
The pattern-banks and selected domestics up, some consumer and industrial names down-fits a market leaning cautiously optimistic but still picky about earnings visibility and input costs.
What to watch next is simple and decisive: the dollar index, copper headlines, and any fresh guidance from Chile's central bank.
If DXY drifts lower and copper holds, the peso likely stays firm within its range and equities extend a measured grind higher. A dollar rebound or copper wobble would cap that story quickly.

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