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Colombia's Markets Wake Up To A Harder Question: Who Pays For The State?
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Colombia entered Wednesday's session with investors arguing less about growth and more about credibility. Fitch's decision to cut the sovereign rating to BB from BB+ landed late Tuesday and quickly became the frame for both the peso and stocks: persistent deficits, rising debt and a weaker fiscal anchor, all with the 2026 political cycle looming.
In markets, that translates into a simple trade: demand a higher premium to hold local risk. In FX, the peso was steady-to-firmer early, but still priced like a country under scrutiny.
TradingView showed USD/COP around 3,842.0 near 08:06 UTC, while the official TRM for the day was set at 3,847.10. Oil added pressure: Brent was trading below $60, a reminder that Colombia's external cushion remains linked to energy.
Globally, the dollar was not the clean villain. The dollar index hovered near 98.4 in early trade, and traders were still debating when the Federal Reserve might cut.
In a Reuters morning write-up, one market participant called the near-term U.S. jobs signal“virtually unactionable,” while another warned inflation could keep cuts later than markets hope. That mix can leave emerging-market FX without a clear tailwind.
Locally, high carry still matters: Banco de la República's policy rate sits at 9.25%, and an ANIF survey pointed to expectations for no change at the Dec. 19 meeting. But carry only protects so much when the fiscal story dominates.
On the equity side, the MSCI COLCAP closed Tuesday at 2,075.88, down 0.75%, on COP 141.14bn of turnover (about $36.7m using the day's TRM). Ecopetrol was the most traded (COP 34.07bn) and fell 2.17% to COP 1,805, consistent with weaker crude and risk appetite.
Top winners (by daily performance among the most-followed names)
Top losers
Technically, USD/COP's 4-hour chart looks like a bounce (RSI back above 60) inside a larger daily downtrend unless it clears the 3,854–3,862 band; support sits around 3,820–3,810.
The COLCAP's 4-hour momentum has softened (RSI in the low-40s), while the daily chart still reads more like consolidation than a broken trend-unless supports give way.
A Fitch downgrade refocused investors on Colombia's fiscal math, pushing risk premia higher even as the global dollar stayed soft.
The peso is bouncing on short-term charts, but the daily picture still reads as a broader cooling trend unless key resistance breaks.
Colombian equities slipped with oil and confidence: Ecopetrol led turnover, while Grupo Sura names led declines.
Colombia entered Wednesday's session with investors arguing less about growth and more about credibility. Fitch's decision to cut the sovereign rating to BB from BB+ landed late Tuesday and quickly became the frame for both the peso and stocks: persistent deficits, rising debt and a weaker fiscal anchor, all with the 2026 political cycle looming.
In markets, that translates into a simple trade: demand a higher premium to hold local risk. In FX, the peso was steady-to-firmer early, but still priced like a country under scrutiny.
TradingView showed USD/COP around 3,842.0 near 08:06 UTC, while the official TRM for the day was set at 3,847.10. Oil added pressure: Brent was trading below $60, a reminder that Colombia's external cushion remains linked to energy.
Globally, the dollar was not the clean villain. The dollar index hovered near 98.4 in early trade, and traders were still debating when the Federal Reserve might cut.
In a Reuters morning write-up, one market participant called the near-term U.S. jobs signal“virtually unactionable,” while another warned inflation could keep cuts later than markets hope. That mix can leave emerging-market FX without a clear tailwind.
Locally, high carry still matters: Banco de la República's policy rate sits at 9.25%, and an ANIF survey pointed to expectations for no change at the Dec. 19 meeting. But carry only protects so much when the fiscal story dominates.
On the equity side, the MSCI COLCAP closed Tuesday at 2,075.88, down 0.75%, on COP 141.14bn of turnover (about $36.7m using the day's TRM). Ecopetrol was the most traded (COP 34.07bn) and fell 2.17% to COP 1,805, consistent with weaker crude and risk appetite.
Top winners (by daily performance among the most-followed names)
PFCIBEST +COP 80 to COP 60,200
Mineros +COP 40 to COP 15,500
Nutresa unchanged at COP 265,000
Enka unchanged at COP 19.80
BMC unchanged at COP 5,000
Top losers
Grupo Sura -2.47% (-COP 1,420) to COP 56,080
PF Grupo Sura -COP 1,080 to COP 45,020
Terpel -COP 440 to COP 19,000
Ecopetrol -2.17% (-COP 40) to COP 1,805
Banco de Bogotá -COP 780 to COP 38,220
Technically, USD/COP's 4-hour chart looks like a bounce (RSI back above 60) inside a larger daily downtrend unless it clears the 3,854–3,862 band; support sits around 3,820–3,810.
The COLCAP's 4-hour momentum has softened (RSI in the low-40s), while the daily chart still reads more like consolidation than a broken trend-unless supports give way.
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