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Mexico's Financial System: Strong On Paper, But Living In A Riskier World
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Mexico's central bank says the financial system is solid but faces rising global and domestic risks.
Cyberattacks and careless use of artificial intelligence are now core threats for banks and payment systems.
Further interest-rate cuts are being weighed even though inflation remains above the 3 percent target.
Mexico's latest Financial Stability Report lands with a clear warning: banks look healthy today, but the world around them is getting rougher and some cracks are visible.
Governor Victoria Rodríguez stresses that capital and liquidity buffers are strong, yet she also lays out a list of dangers that could quickly test that strength.
The first layer of risk comes from abroad. A weaker global economy, sharper trade disputes and suddenly tighter financial conditions could all hit an open, export-driven economy like Mexico's.
A surprise downgrade of a major local borrower or a global“risk-off” episode would raise funding costs, pressure the peso and squeeze credit for families and firms.
The second layer is domestic. Inflation has fallen from painful highs but still sits above the central bank's 3 percent goal. Since mid-2024, Banxico has been trimming its benchmark rate from restrictive levels and will consider another cut on December 18.
Some voices see careful easing as a reward for keeping prices under control. Others push for faster cuts that would feel good in the short term but could weaken the currency and reignite inflation later.
Behind the headlines, Banxico's stress tests tell an important story. Even under severe scenarios – weaker growth, higher global rates and market turmoil – commercial banks remain above minimum capital requirements.
That reflects years of cautious supervision and a financial sector that has avoided the more experimental policies seen elsewhere. Then comes the structural threat: cyber risk supercharged by new technology.
The report flags attacks on technology supply chains and warns that uncontrolled use of AI inside institutions can open the door to data leaks and fraud. The sector stays on“yellow” alert, meaning vigilance rather than panic.
Mexico's central bank says the financial system is solid but faces rising global and domestic risks.
Cyberattacks and careless use of artificial intelligence are now core threats for banks and payment systems.
Further interest-rate cuts are being weighed even though inflation remains above the 3 percent target.
Mexico's latest Financial Stability Report lands with a clear warning: banks look healthy today, but the world around them is getting rougher and some cracks are visible.
Governor Victoria Rodríguez stresses that capital and liquidity buffers are strong, yet she also lays out a list of dangers that could quickly test that strength.
The first layer of risk comes from abroad. A weaker global economy, sharper trade disputes and suddenly tighter financial conditions could all hit an open, export-driven economy like Mexico's.
A surprise downgrade of a major local borrower or a global“risk-off” episode would raise funding costs, pressure the peso and squeeze credit for families and firms.
The second layer is domestic. Inflation has fallen from painful highs but still sits above the central bank's 3 percent goal. Since mid-2024, Banxico has been trimming its benchmark rate from restrictive levels and will consider another cut on December 18.
Some voices see careful easing as a reward for keeping prices under control. Others push for faster cuts that would feel good in the short term but could weaken the currency and reignite inflation later.
Behind the headlines, Banxico's stress tests tell an important story. Even under severe scenarios – weaker growth, higher global rates and market turmoil – commercial banks remain above minimum capital requirements.
That reflects years of cautious supervision and a financial sector that has avoided the more experimental policies seen elsewhere. Then comes the structural threat: cyber risk supercharged by new technology.
The report flags attacks on technology supply chains and warns that uncontrolled use of AI inside institutions can open the door to data leaks and fraud. The sector stays on“yellow” alert, meaning vigilance rather than panic.
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