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Mexican Peso And Stocks Trade Cautiously As Debt Fears Meet Global Risk-Off
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) The Mexican peso is trading around 18.32–18.35 per dollar on Wednesday morning, broadly unchanged from Tuesday's close after a volatile start to the week.
The currency briefly weakened on its return from the Revolution Day long weekend but clawed back losses overnight as global risk sentiment stabilized and the broader dollar index hovered just below the 100 mark, well off its 2024 highs.
Part of the peso's resilience remains purely fundamental. Even after the 25-basis-point rate cut in early November, Banxico 's policy rate near 7.25% still offers one of the highest real yields in the investment-grade world.
The central bank has shifted to a more data-dependent, slightly more hawkish tone, signalling that future cuts will be cautious as long as core inflation stays sticky. That stance keeps carry trades attractive and limits the room for a sustained peso sell-off.
At the same time, investors are increasingly focused on Mexico's debt trajectory. The business-economists association IMEF now estimates total public-sector liabilities – including Pemex and CFE – at roughly $1.07 trillion, almost double their level in 2018.
IMEF has warned that if rating agencies eventually strip Mexico of investment-grade status, the peso could face a sharp, lasting depreciation as benchmark-tracking funds are forced to exit.
Those concerns are beginning to creep into FX pricing, especially on days when political noise from Washington puts security cooperation back in the headlines.
Technically, the four-hour USD/MXN chart shows the pair fading from a mid-November bounce above 18.50 back into the 18.30 area.
RSI on this timeframe has slipped from near overbought into the low-40s, while MACD has rolled over from a brief positive spell, suggesting waning upside momentum.
On the daily chart, USD/MXN is still locked in a broader downtrend that started mid-year: prices sit below the Ichimoku cloud and key moving averages, MACD remains negative, and daily RSI hovers in the low-40s rather than oversold territory.
Support is clustered around 18.20–18.25, with resistance in the 18.50–18.60 band. Overall, the structure still favours a modestly stronger peso in the medium term but leaves room for intraday spikes if global risk sentiment sours.
On the equity side, Mexican stocks tracked the global pull-back on Tuesday. The S&P/BMV IPC benchmark slipped about 0.55% to roughly 61,984 points, easing from recent record territory.
IPC softens amid global risk-off turn
The move mirrored a broader risk-off shift led by profit-taking in expensive U.S. technology names and a slight back-up in global bond yields as traders trimmed the most aggressive Federal Reserve cut expectations for 2026.
Within the IPC, cyclical names bore the brunt of the selling. Large materials and financials – including mining, banking and media groups – underperformed on worries about global growth and sensitivity to any renewed U.S. tariff or security rhetoric.
Defensive, domestically focused stocks held up better: consumer-health, insurance and telecom names posted small gains as investors rotated toward steady cash-flow stories.
International flows remain supportive in the background. The main Mexico equity ETF listed in New York, EWW, is up strongly year-to-date and continues to attract interest from global asset allocators looking for liquid, investment-grade exposure in Latin America with a manufacturing base tied into nearshoring.
Trading volumes this week have been solid rather than spectacular, consistent with a market consolidating after a strong run rather than dumping risk.
Technically, the daily IPC chart still shows a clear uptrend from June lows, with prices comfortably above a rising 200-day moving average and only modestly below the recent highs around 62,500–62,800.
Momentum, however, has cooled: MACD has crossed downward and RSI has retreated from overbought readings toward the high-40s.
The four-hour chart underlines the short-term correction, with a sequence of lower highs since early November and the index repeatedly testing support in the 61,700–62,000 zone.
A clean break below that band would open room toward 61,000, while a rebound that pushes back above 62,500 would confirm that the uptrend has reasserted itself.
For now, Mexico starts Wednesday with a steady currency and an equity market in controlled pull-back mode.
High real yields, cautious central-bank guidance and solid corporate earnings are still offsetting growing concern about public-sector leverage and a fragile global appetite for risk.
The currency briefly weakened on its return from the Revolution Day long weekend but clawed back losses overnight as global risk sentiment stabilized and the broader dollar index hovered just below the 100 mark, well off its 2024 highs.
Part of the peso's resilience remains purely fundamental. Even after the 25-basis-point rate cut in early November, Banxico 's policy rate near 7.25% still offers one of the highest real yields in the investment-grade world.
The central bank has shifted to a more data-dependent, slightly more hawkish tone, signalling that future cuts will be cautious as long as core inflation stays sticky. That stance keeps carry trades attractive and limits the room for a sustained peso sell-off.
At the same time, investors are increasingly focused on Mexico's debt trajectory. The business-economists association IMEF now estimates total public-sector liabilities – including Pemex and CFE – at roughly $1.07 trillion, almost double their level in 2018.
IMEF has warned that if rating agencies eventually strip Mexico of investment-grade status, the peso could face a sharp, lasting depreciation as benchmark-tracking funds are forced to exit.
Those concerns are beginning to creep into FX pricing, especially on days when political noise from Washington puts security cooperation back in the headlines.
Technically, the four-hour USD/MXN chart shows the pair fading from a mid-November bounce above 18.50 back into the 18.30 area.
RSI on this timeframe has slipped from near overbought into the low-40s, while MACD has rolled over from a brief positive spell, suggesting waning upside momentum.
On the daily chart, USD/MXN is still locked in a broader downtrend that started mid-year: prices sit below the Ichimoku cloud and key moving averages, MACD remains negative, and daily RSI hovers in the low-40s rather than oversold territory.
Support is clustered around 18.20–18.25, with resistance in the 18.50–18.60 band. Overall, the structure still favours a modestly stronger peso in the medium term but leaves room for intraday spikes if global risk sentiment sours.
On the equity side, Mexican stocks tracked the global pull-back on Tuesday. The S&P/BMV IPC benchmark slipped about 0.55% to roughly 61,984 points, easing from recent record territory.
IPC softens amid global risk-off turn
The move mirrored a broader risk-off shift led by profit-taking in expensive U.S. technology names and a slight back-up in global bond yields as traders trimmed the most aggressive Federal Reserve cut expectations for 2026.
Within the IPC, cyclical names bore the brunt of the selling. Large materials and financials – including mining, banking and media groups – underperformed on worries about global growth and sensitivity to any renewed U.S. tariff or security rhetoric.
Defensive, domestically focused stocks held up better: consumer-health, insurance and telecom names posted small gains as investors rotated toward steady cash-flow stories.
International flows remain supportive in the background. The main Mexico equity ETF listed in New York, EWW, is up strongly year-to-date and continues to attract interest from global asset allocators looking for liquid, investment-grade exposure in Latin America with a manufacturing base tied into nearshoring.
Trading volumes this week have been solid rather than spectacular, consistent with a market consolidating after a strong run rather than dumping risk.
Technically, the daily IPC chart still shows a clear uptrend from June lows, with prices comfortably above a rising 200-day moving average and only modestly below the recent highs around 62,500–62,800.
Momentum, however, has cooled: MACD has crossed downward and RSI has retreated from overbought readings toward the high-40s.
The four-hour chart underlines the short-term correction, with a sequence of lower highs since early November and the index repeatedly testing support in the 61,700–62,000 zone.
A clean break below that band would open room toward 61,000, while a rebound that pushes back above 62,500 would confirm that the uptrend has reasserted itself.
For now, Mexico starts Wednesday with a steady currency and an equity market in controlled pull-back mode.
High real yields, cautious central-bank guidance and solid corporate earnings are still offsetting growing concern about public-sector leverage and a fragile global appetite for risk.
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