Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Latin American Pulse For Saturday, April 4, 2026


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Ecuador's Noboa Decrees State of Exception in 9 Provinces on Eve of Semana Santa - Suspends Domicile Rights, No Curfew - USS Nimitz in Panama Sparks Canal Neutrality Debate as US Backs Sovereignty and Targets China - LatAm Semana Santa Tourism Surges Past 80% Occupancy Despite Oil-Driven Travel Cost Hikes - Cuba's Canasta Básica Reform Stalls: Government Announces, Then Denies, Then Leaves 11 Million People Guessing - Markets Closed - Sábado de Gloria

Executive Summary

The Big Picture: Today's Latin American Pulse is a Sábado de Gloria edition - the quietest day on the hemisphere's calendar. Markets are closed. Capitals are empty. But security does not take holidays. Ecuador's President Noboa decreed a new state of exception across nine provinces and four cantons on the eve of Semana Santa, suspending domicile inviolability and authorising joint military-police operations against organised crime. Meanwhile, the USS Nimitz carrier group in Panamanian waters is generating a real-time debate about Canal neutrality, with Washington simultaneously backing Panama's sovereignty and criticising China's commercial presence. This is part of The Rio Times ' comprehensive coverage of Latin American financial markets and economic developments.

The economic story this weekend is resilience. Despite the steepest oil-driven travel cost increases in years, Latin American Semana Santa tourism surged past 80% hotel occupancy in key destinations - a signal that the consumer is absorbing the Iran premium better than feared. In Cuba, the promised April overhaul of the canasta básica subsidy system has descended into confusion: the government announced it, the MINCIN denied it, and 11 million Cubans are left waiting to learn whether the libreta - the ration book that has defined daily life since 1962 - will survive in its current form.

All LatAm markets are closed through Easter weekend. Last available data: IBOV 188,052.02 (+0.05%), IPSA 10,739.15 (−1.08%), COLCAP 2,280.95 (−0.24%), USD/BRL 5.1568 (−0.11%). MERVAL and IPC last traded Wednesday. Markets reopen Monday. The positions taken during Holy Week - Argentina's Iran expulsion, Noboa's security decree, gold's 3.3% crash - will price on Monday morning.

Risk Snapshot
Country Key Driver Risk Level
Ecuador State of exception in 9 provinces + 4 cantons; domicile inviolability suspended; joint military-police ops; follows toque de queda that ended Mar 30; FBI permanent presence CRITICAL
Panama USS Nimitz in Canal waters; US backs sovereignty while criticising China; neutrality debate; LatAm military exercises ELEVATED
Cuba Canasta básica reform announced then denied; tanker unloading complete; Sandro Castro CNN interview; energy crisis persists CRITICAL
Peru 8 days to Apr 12 vote; Cerrón TC ruling STILL PENDING; 34 candidates; FBI returned 48 cultural pieces; López Chau interview CRITICAL
LatAm Region Semana Santa tourism >80% occupancy; oil-driven cost hikes absorbed; markets closed; Artemis II en route to Moon; ATENEA deployed MODERATE
Ecuador: Noboa Decrees State of Exception in Nine Provinces on the Eve of Semana Santa Decreto 353 declares "grave conmoción interna" in Guayas, Manabí, Pichincha, Esmeraldas, El Oro, Los Ríos, Santa Elena, Santo Domingo de los Tsáchilas, and Sucumbíos plus four cantons; suspends domicile inviolability and correspondence privacy; authorises joint military-police allanamientos; no toque de queda; follows previous curfew that ended March 30; FBI permanent presence agreed; US joint operations against narco-designated terrorist groups What Happened
  • - The decree: President Daniel Noboa signed Decreto Ejecutivo 353 on Thursday, April 2, declaring a state of exception for "grave conmoción interna" across nine coastal and highland provinces plus four cantons: La Maná (Cotopaxi), Las Naves and Echeandía (Bolívar), and La Troncal (Cañar). The decree suspends the rights to domicile inviolability and correspondence privacy, allowing the armed forces and police to conduct raids, search homes, and intercept communications when there are indications of armed groups, organised crime, weapons, explosives, or other threats. All operations must comply with principles of necessity, proportionality, and due process.
  • - No curfew: Unlike the previous security measure - a toque de queda that was in force across four provinces until March 30 - this state of exception does not include curfew restrictions. Citizens can circulate freely. The shift from curfew to targeted raiding authority suggests Noboa is moving from blanket population control to surgical operations against specific networks, while trying to preserve normal Semana Santa activity and the tourism economy that depends on it.
  • - The broader security architecture: The decree is the latest element of Noboa's escalating security strategy. Ecuador has agreed to a permanent FBI presence on its territory. The US has announced joint operations with Ecuadorian forces against narco groups designated as terrorist organisations. The Army recently destroyed a clandestine airstrip in Puebloviejo, a strategic narcotic corridor. And Noboa expelled Cuba's diplomats in a previous round, mirroring the geopolitical alignment with Washington that Argentina demonstrated this week with its Iran expulsion. The nine provinces under the new decree cover the Pacific coast, the capital Quito (Pichincha), and the Amazon border with Colombia (Sucumbíos).
Why It Matters

Ecuador is now operating under a permanent state of security exception. The March 30 curfew ended; the April 2 state of exception began 72 hours later. The effect is a continuous suspension of constitutional rights in the country's most populated regions - covering roughly 70% of the national population. For investors, the signal is dual: Noboa is serious about security (positive for the long-term business environment), but the country cannot normalise its legal framework (negative for rule-of-law metrics). The tensions with Colombia - including Petro's radar installation on the border and mutual accusations about narco-crossings - add a bilateral dimension. As covered in the Defense Monitor, Ecuador's security transformation under Noboa is the most aggressive in the hemisphere outside of El Salvador.

Key Watch

Duration of state of exception. Corte Constitucional review. Raid results. Colombia border tensions. FBI operations scope. Human rights monitoring. Tourism impact.

RISK: CRITICAL

Panama: The Nimitz Arrives and the Canal Neutrality Debate Begins USS Nimitz carrier group enters Panamanian waters for exercises with LatAm partners; CNN reports "elogios, criticism, and doubts about neutrality"; US State Department backs Panama's sovereignty while criticising China for "undermining" global commerce; Trump's "Doctrina Donroe" conference in Miami; Southern Command presence expands across Caribbean and Central America What Happened
  • - The arrival: The USS Nimitz carrier strike group arrived in Panamanian waters this week for exercises with Latin American naval partners, part of a broader US Southern Command deployment across the Caribbean and Central America. The Nimitz - one of the US Navy's largest warships - transited the Canal zone, generating immediate political reaction. CNN en Español reported the arrival drew "elogios, criticism, and doubts about the neutrality of the country."
  • - The dual message: The US State Department simultaneously endorsed Panama's sovereignty and criticised China for "undermining" global commerce through its growing commercial presence in the Canal Zone. This framing - support for sovereignty plus anti-China rhetoric - is the core of what the Trump administration presented at the Miami "Doctrina Donroe" conference as its updated Monroe Doctrine for the hemisphere. The implication: the Canal is a strategic asset in the US-China competition, and Panama must choose sides without being told to choose.
  • - The neutrality question: The 1977 Torrijos-Carter treaties guarantee the Canal's permanent neutrality. Panama's government has consistently maintained that the waterway is open to all nations on equal terms. But hosting a US carrier group - while Russian oil is unloading in Cuba and China operates port facilities at both Canal entrances through Hutchison Ports - puts the neutrality principle under practical strain. Panama's response will define whether the Canal remains a shared global asset or becomes a contested space in a multipolar world.
Why It Matters

The Panama Canal handles approximately 5% of global trade. Its neutrality has been the foundation of its economic model since 1999. The Nimitz visit forces a question that Panama has successfully avoided for decades: can a country hosting Chinese port operators and American warships simultaneously remain neutral? The answer matters for every commodity that crosses the isthmus - including the oil, copper, and grain that define Latin American export economies. As covered in yesterday's Pulse, the hemisphere is being reorganised along Iran-war lines, and Panama sits at the geographic chokepoint of that reorganisation.

Key Watch

Nimitz deployment duration. Panama government response. China's Hutchison Ports reaction. Canal traffic data. Southern Command exercises scope. Doctrina Donroe implementation.

RISK: ELEVATED

LatAm Semana Santa: Tourism Surges Past 80% Despite the Oil Tax EFE panoramic reports high mobility across the region with hotel occupancy exceeding 80% in key destinations; oil-driven travel cost increases absorbed by consumers; Cancún preparing for surge despite insecurity and sargazo; Mexico's World Cup preparations advance (FIFA grants Liga MX stadium deadline extension); Quito's Arrastre de Caudas - the only surviving Roman legion Semana Santa ritual in the world What Happened
  • - The numbers: EFE's regional panoramic reported that Latin America registered high tourist mobility during Semana Santa, with millions of travellers and hotel occupancy rates exceeding 80% in key destinations. This occurred despite the encarecimiento - the price increase - of travel driven by the oil surge linked to the Iran war. Airfares, ground transport, and fuel costs are all elevated, yet consumers absorbed the shock and travelled anyway. The data suggests disposable income resilience and pent-up demand following the pandemic-era recovery.
  • - Mexico spotlight: Cancún hoteliers are preparing for a major tourist surge, though they face twin challenges: insecurity and sargazo (the seaweed that periodically inundates Caribbean beaches). FIFA granted the Liga MX an extension to deliver World Cup stadiums - a signal that venue preparations are running behind with 78 days to go. And Uruguay, the country that removed "Santa" from Semana Santa in 1919, is experiencing growth in religious tourism - an irony that captures the cultural complexity of the region.
  • - Cultural highlights: Quito hosted the Arrastre de Caudas in the Catedral Metropolitana - the only place in the world where this Roman legion-era Semana Santa ritual survives. In Lima, the "Cristo Cholo" led the annual Vía Crucis up Cerro San Cristóbal. La Paz saw its traditional Viernes Santo procession through the city centre. And in Caracas, the Petare favela - Venezuela's largest - staged its own community Vía Crucis, organised by young people and religious leaders in a neighbourhood where the state is largely absent.
Why It Matters

The tourism data is an economic signal. If consumers are absorbing $90+ Brent and still travelling at 80%+ occupancy, it suggests the LatAm consumer is more resilient than macro indicators imply. This is particularly relevant for Chile (where Kast's fuel shock is being absorbed domestically but hurting his polls) and for Mexico (where the World Cup tourism dividend is approaching). The cultural dimension matters too: Semana Santa remains the single largest synchronized population movement in Latin America, and its smooth execution - amid states of exception in Ecuador, security crises in Haiti, and political transitions in Mexico - is itself a form of institutional resilience.

Key Watch

Final occupancy numbers post-Easter. Revenue vs. 2025 comparisons. Oil price trajectory impact on summer travel. World Cup stadium readiness. Sargazo season. Consumer confidence readings.

RISK: MODERATE

Cuba: The Canasta Básica Reform That Was Announced, Denied, and Left Everyone Guessing Government announced in February shift from subsidising products to subsidising people starting April; MINCIN denied any changes on April 3; PM Marrero said in December the process "has no return"; provinces ordered to produce their own food; Díaz-Canel's "Opción Cero" for fuel; tanker Anatoli Kolodkin completed 96-hour unloading at Matanzas; Fidel's grandson Sandro Castro tells CNN he's "influencer and capitalist" What Happened
  • - The reform: In February, Cuba's government announced through Tribuna de La Habana that starting in April, the canasta básica normada - the subsidised food basket distributed through the libreta de abastecimiento since 1962 - would undergo a fundamental change. Instead of subsidising products (selling rice, sugar, oil at below-market prices to everyone), the government would subsidise people (targeting vulnerable individuals while everyone else pays higher, unsubsidised prices). Prime Minister Marrero had told the National Assembly in December that the elimination of product subsidies "has no return" and would proceed "product by product."
  • - The denial: On April 3 - with April already underway and no visible changes - the MINCIN (Ministry of Internal Commerce) posted on social media that reports of changes to the libreta were "false" and urged the population to rely only on official channels. The denial directly contradicts the February announcement and Marrero's December statement. The confusion has left 11 million Cubans uncertain about whether the most fundamental element of daily economic life - the ration book - is about to change or not.
  • - The context: The reform debate coincides with three developments. First, the Anatoli Kolodkin completed its 96-hour unloading of 740,000 barrels (approximately 100,000 tonnes) of Russian oil at Matanzas - providing approximately 10-15 days of national fuel consumption. Second, Díaz-Canel ordered municipalities to produce their own food under what he called an "Opción Cero" framework - effectively decentralising the food system. And third, Fidel Castro's grandson Sandro Castro gave a CNN interview in which he described himself as an "influencer and capitalist" - a surreal juxtaposition with a country debating whether its citizens can afford unsubsidised rice.
Why It Matters

The libreta is not an economic instrument - it is a social contract. Since 1962, every Cuban household has been entitled to a monthly allocation of basic goods at symbolic prices. Removing the universal subsidy would be the most significant economic reform in Cuban history - larger in its daily impact than the 2021 ordenamiento monetario. The fact that the government announced the change, then denied it, suggests an internal policy conflict between reformers (who see targeted subsidies as fiscally necessary) and political operatives (who fear the social explosion of telling 11 million people that rice now costs market price). The MINCIN denial does not resolve the contradiction - it deepens it. As covered in previous editions, Cuba's crisis is now defined by fuel, food, and communication failures operating simultaneously. The tanker oil buys 10-15 days. The libreta debate is permanent.

Key Watch

MINCIN vs. Marrero policy contradiction. April distribution schedules. Havana provincial food production mandate. Fuel from tanker reaching distribution. Sandro Castro political implications. Next oil delivery timeline.

RISK: CRITICAL

Regional Snapshot
Peru - 8 Days Out The TC still has not ruled on Cerrón's habeas corpus. With 8 days to the April 12 vote, the window has essentially closed for any Cerrón impact. Centroizquierda candidate Alfonso López Chau told EFE these elections are "a crusade of good vs evil" against the conservative parties. The FBI returned 48 pre-Columbian cultural pieces this week. The Cristo Cholo led his annual Vía Crucis up Cerro San Cristóbal. Full coverage. Argentina, Chile & Venezuela Argentina's 48-hour deadline for Iran diplomat Tehrani expired Friday - his departure status is pending confirmation. ATENEA microsatellite successfully deployed from Artemis II (El Cronista confirmed). Spain announced it will grant nationality to Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo López - a symbolic political statement during Caracas's rapprochement with Washington. Chile's Kast enters Easter weekend with three polls showing approval between 34.7% and 43%, the fastest decline for a new president in modern history. Previous editions.
Mexico & Space Mexico's government rejected a UN report concluding that forced disappearances continue, calling it "tendencioso." In a poignant contrast, the names of Mexico's disappeared are aboard Artemis II - travelling to the Moon on a mission that Aristegui reported. FIFA granted the Liga MX a deadline extension to deliver World Cup stadiums with 78 days to kickoff. New canciller Roberto Velasco awaits Senate ratification. Artemis II astronauts completed their first full day in orbit; the Orion capsule is heading for the trans-lunar injection burn. Argentine satellite ATENEA deployed successfully. Return splashdown ~April 10. Previous editions.
Markets at a Glance - Last Available (All Closed)
Index Last Close Change As Of / Context
Ibovespa 188,052.02 +0.05% Thu Apr 2 close; only LatAm market that traded Thu
IPSA (Chile) 10,739.15 −1.08% Thu Apr 2; gave back part of Tue's 2.03% surge
COLCAP 2,280.95 −0.24% Thu Apr 2; C-390 procurement digested
USD/BRL 5.1568 −0.11% Thu Apr 2; real strengthening continues
MERVAL 2,999,341.73 +0.05% Wed Apr 1 (Malvinas Day + Jueves Santo closure)
IPC (Mexico) 69,702.02 +1.59% Wed Apr 1 (Jueves Santo closure)
Gold US$4,601.33 −3.30% Wed Apr 1; Iran premium unwinding
Silver US$70.769 −5.71% Wed Apr 1; steepest drop of the week
Bitcoin US$66,496 −2.36% Wed Apr 1; risk-off in digital assets

All LatAm exchanges closed for Sábado de Gloria. Markets reopen Monday April 6. Equity/commodity data from TradingView Tier 0 charts (timestamped Apr 3, 08:41–08:42 UTC). Ecuador from Primicias/Teleamazonas/Decreto 353. USS Nimitz/Panama from CNN en Español. Tourism from EFE panoramic. Cuba from Directorio Cubano/CiberCuba/Periódico Cubano/OnCubaNews/CubaNet/CNN. Peru from EFE/La República. Argentina from El Cronista/La Nación/Perfil. Chile from Cadem/Criteria/Pulso Ciudadano. Mexico from Aristegui/El Universal/UnoTV. Previous Pulse editions.

The Week Ahead
Date Event Country
Sun Apr 5 Easter Sunday - Domingo de Resurrección All LatAm
Mon Apr 6 Markets reopen; Artemis II closest lunar approach (~7,600 km); post-Easter positioning; Holy Week positions price in All / Space
~Apr 10 Artemis II reentry and splashdown (Pacific Ocean); Cuba refined products reach distribution Space / Cuba
Sat Apr 12 Peru presidential & legislative first round - 34 candidates; most fragmented field in modern history Peru
Mid-Apr Mexico Velasco Senate ratification; Ecuador Corte Constitucional review of state of exception Mexico / Ecuador
Sat Apr 19 Bolivia - seven gubernatorial runoffs Bolivia
Latin American Pulse dashboard showing Ecuador Noboa state of exception 9 provinces, USS Nimitz Panama Canal neutrality debate, LatAm Semana Santa tourism 80 percent occupancy, Cuba canasta basica libreta reform confusion MINCIN denial, markets closed Sabado de Gloria for April 4 2026

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The Rio Times

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