Peru's Runoff Between Fujimori & Sánchez
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % valid |
|---|---|---|---|
| Keiko Fujimori | Fuerza Popular | 2,877,678 | 17.181% |
| Roberto Sánchez | Juntos por el Perú | 2,015,114 | 12.031% |
| Rafael López Aliaga | Renovación Popular | 1,993,904 | 11.904% |
| Carlos Álvarez | País para Todos | 1,326,717 | 7.92% |
| Alfonso López Chau | Ahora Nación | 1,221,272 | 7.29% |
| Blank ballots | - | 2,372,896 | 11.77% (of cast) |
| Null ballots | - | 1,045,425 | 5.18% (of cast) |
The top five candidates combined captured only 61.2% of valid votes. Thirty-one further candidates absorbed the rest. The blank-plus-null share, 16.95% of all ballots cast, is large enough on its own to be a structural force. Both campaigns must compete for the 39% that did not vote for either of them in the first round, alongside the disaffected protest vote.
China, Copper, and the External ConstraintPeru is the world's third-largest copper producer and a top global supplier of gold, silver, and zinc. Mining still anchors the equity market and the fiscal accounts through any political cycle. China is embedded in ports, electricity distribution, mining concessions, and trade logistics. The Cosco-built deep-water port at Chancay, inaugurated in late 2024, is the most visible piece. It is not simply infrastructure. It is a strategic reorientation of Peruvian export geography toward the Pacific and Shanghai, with implications that reach Atacama lithium, Brazilian soy, and Chilean copper supply chains all the way back to Yokohama and Busan.
That structural reality gives the next president less room than campaign rhetoric implies. Washington can influence the political theatre. Beijing's leverage is concrete: logistics, capital, electricity, offtake agreements. A Peru president can change rhetoric faster than they can change the country's operating system. Both Fujimori and Sánchez know this. Both have been measured in their China language. The harder question is whether either has the political capital to negotiate the next round of concession renewals on terms favorable to the Peruvian state without breaking the Chinese-Peruvian commercial settlement that now underwrites the export economy.
Mining and the Congress ProblemThe mining concession debate is the visible danger. Congress has already advanced legislation that would make concessions more revocable, a change that would touch a multibillion-dollar investment pipeline including expansion at Las Bambas, Quellaveco, Antamina, Cuajone, and Toquepala. For a president taking office with weak legitimacy, mining becomes the meeting point of populism, revenue needs, regional protest, and foreign capital, all pressing on the same lever.
JPMorgan published a research note on May 14 describing the fiscal viability of Sánchez's economic programme as“questionable.” Its analysts also concluded that the Peruvian institutional framework would likely limit structural change regardless of which candidate wins, because Congress is fragmented and the Constitution constrains executive unilateralism. The Peruvian sol has depreciated 2.01% year-to-date, the worst performance of any major Latin American currency in 2026, reflecting election-driven dollarisation by households and corporates. Petroperú received a $2 billion emergency loan authorisation in recent weeks, a marker of how the state-energy company's balance sheet has become a parallel political variable.
What Investors and Analysts Watch-
The first clean runoff polls. Now that the legal case against Sánchez has entered the campaign bloodstream, polling firms IPSOS, Datum, and CPI will publish the first reliable post-news measurements.
López Aliaga voter dispersal. Whether his constituency consolidates behind Fujimori, splits to blank votes, or stays at home is the single largest second-round variable.
The May 27 court step. Eleven days before the runoff, the judge will decide whether the Sánchez case advances to oral trial. A negative procedural result lands inside the final campaign week.
ONPE and JNE audit language. Any new technical statement that could become the basis for post-election contestation is the most under-priced political risk.
Mining-concession legislation. Whether the revocability bill becomes a runoff wedge issue, or stays in committee until after June 7, will signal which Congress posture follows whoever wins.
China-facing infrastructure language. Watch Chancay, the Sinopec offtake renewal, and BCG-financed transmission lines as the litmus tests of any continuity narrative.
Sunday, June 7, 2026. Peruvian citizens abroad vote the same day at their consulates. Voting is compulsory, with administrative penalties for those who do not vote.
Who are the candidates?Keiko Fujimori of Fuerza Popular (right) faces Roberto Sánchez of Juntos por el Perú (left). Fujimori took 17.181% in the first round, Sánchez 12.031%. The new president serves a five-year term, 2026 to 2031.
Why does this election matter beyond Peru?Peru is the world's third-largest copper producer, the China-facing logistics platform through Chancay, and one of Latin America's clearest cases of economic resilience despite political collapse. Mining concession stability and Chinese infrastructure continuity matter to global supply chains regardless of who wins.
What is the central risk?The central risk is that the winner takes office without enough legitimacy to govern, restarting the cycle of congressional conflict, street pressure, prosecutorial battles, and legal warfare that produced eight presidents in the past decade.
Will the Sánchez prosecution remove him from the ballot?No. The May 27 audience determines whether the case advances to oral trial. Even an advancing case does not strip Sánchez of his candidacy before June 7. The prosecutor has requested permanent disqualification from leading his party, not from electoral participation. His defence team has invoked archived parts of the original case from prior judicial reviews.
Connected CoverageThis analysis sits inside our running Peru cluster. The first-round result is detailed in our first-round result readout. The runoff lock confirmation is framed in our runoff confirmation note. The candidate-by-candidate field is mapped in our candidates and stakes guide. The geopolitical context is in our superpower tug-of-war analysis.
Reported by The Rio Times - Latin American financial news. Filed May 15, 2026.
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