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Softer Dollar, High Rates Lift Colombia - Oil Still A Handbrake
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Colombia woke up to a familiar split-screen. The peso was a touch stronger, and stocks hovered near a year-high, yet oil's drift and sticky inflation kept a hand on the brake.
Here's the simple picture. Around the Bogotá open, the exchange rate sat near 3,843 pesos per dollar as the global dollar index eased.
When the dollar softens, high-yielding currencies benefit, and Colombia 's policy rate-9.25%-still offers one of the richer interest-rate cushions in emerging markets. That carry attracts capital, even as September inflation at 5.18% argues against quick local rate cuts.
Equities tell the same story in brighter colors. The MSCI COLCAP closed Monday at 1,956.37, up 0.54% on roughly COP 124 billion in turnover-just shy of its 52-week high.
Foreign interest is creeping back: the Global X Colombia ETF reports about $109 million in assets with steady recent inflows, a small but telling sign that money is tiptoeing in rather than rushing.
Colombia Rebuilds Market Credibility but Oil Caps Peso Gains
Behind the story is a credibility rebuild. Congress approved the 2026 budget and the finance ministry executed a record local-debt swap this month, lowering near-term refinancing risk and signaling steadier hands.
Those moves don't erase structural debates over growth and politics, but they reduce the background noise that often scares off foreigners.
Two gauges set today's risk/reward. First, oil: Colombia's currency still tracks crude because exports matter. With Brent stuck in the mid-$60s, the peso 's upside is capped.
Second, the global rates axis: if U.S. yields slip after the Federal Reserve, the carry trade lives on; if they climb, the dollar will bite back.
Technical markers fit the macro. USD/COP is boxed between 3,825–3,830 support and 3,850–3,855 resistance, with a descending cap near 3,890–3,900. The COLCAP trend is up, but overbought, with resistance at 1,960–1,970 and support at 1,932 then 1,890.
Bottom line for readers outside Colombia: this is a market being pulled higher by policy discipline and global carry, and held back by oil and inflation. If the dollar stays soft, dips in the peso and stocks are more likely to be bought than feared.
Here's the simple picture. Around the Bogotá open, the exchange rate sat near 3,843 pesos per dollar as the global dollar index eased.
When the dollar softens, high-yielding currencies benefit, and Colombia 's policy rate-9.25%-still offers one of the richer interest-rate cushions in emerging markets. That carry attracts capital, even as September inflation at 5.18% argues against quick local rate cuts.
Equities tell the same story in brighter colors. The MSCI COLCAP closed Monday at 1,956.37, up 0.54% on roughly COP 124 billion in turnover-just shy of its 52-week high.
Foreign interest is creeping back: the Global X Colombia ETF reports about $109 million in assets with steady recent inflows, a small but telling sign that money is tiptoeing in rather than rushing.
Colombia Rebuilds Market Credibility but Oil Caps Peso Gains
Behind the story is a credibility rebuild. Congress approved the 2026 budget and the finance ministry executed a record local-debt swap this month, lowering near-term refinancing risk and signaling steadier hands.
Those moves don't erase structural debates over growth and politics, but they reduce the background noise that often scares off foreigners.
Two gauges set today's risk/reward. First, oil: Colombia's currency still tracks crude because exports matter. With Brent stuck in the mid-$60s, the peso 's upside is capped.
Second, the global rates axis: if U.S. yields slip after the Federal Reserve, the carry trade lives on; if they climb, the dollar will bite back.
Technical markers fit the macro. USD/COP is boxed between 3,825–3,830 support and 3,850–3,855 resistance, with a descending cap near 3,890–3,900. The COLCAP trend is up, but overbought, with resistance at 1,960–1,970 and support at 1,932 then 1,890.
Bottom line for readers outside Colombia: this is a market being pulled higher by policy discipline and global carry, and held back by oil and inflation. If the dollar stays soft, dips in the peso and stocks are more likely to be bought than feared.
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