Chile's IPSA Holds 10,273 As Copper, Peso Slide
| Measure | Level | Change | Read |
|---|---|---|---|
| IPSA close | 10,273 | −0.30% | Region's mildest fall |
| Session range | 10,260–10,348 | - | Narrow band |
| Peso (USD/CLP) | 912.70 | +1.95% | Peso nearly 2% weaker |
| Momentum (daily RSI) | ~37 | - | Soft, not oversold |
| Long-term support | ~10,197 | - | Index sitting on it |
The picture is a market absorbing real pressure: a weak currency, a commodity sell-off, yet a benchmark down only a fraction and resting on the floor that has defined its year.
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Chile - Live Market Board SantiagoJun 6, 2026 · 04:30 S&P IPSA · benchmark 10,273 -0.30% L 10,260day rangeH 10,348 Market breadth · 11 names 9% advancing 1 ▲ advancing10 declining ▼ Currencies, rates & key inputs USD / CLP 912.70 +1.95% Copper 6.29 -3.47% Gold 4,365 -2.47% Sector heatmap · average move today Financials +0.35% BSANTANDER, BANCO CHILE Energy -0.16% COPEC Industrials -0.63% LATAM AIR Materials -0.70% SQM-B, CMPC Consumer Disc. -1.13% FALABELLA Utilities -1.58% ENELAM Consumer Staples -2.31% CENCOSUD Other -7.18% COPPER, SOUTHERN COPPER Latin America scoreboard IndexLastTodayStrength IbovespaBrazil 169,019 -0.77% S&P/BMV IPCMexico 66,141 -1.86% S&P IPSAChile 10,273 -0.30% S&P MERVALArgentina 3,084,617 -2.83% MSCI COLCAPColombia 2,192.97 -1.58% BVL S&P PerúPeru 34,937.73 +0.29% Full instrument board
| Instrument | Last | Change | YoY | Prev. | High | Low | Volume |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IPSA | 10,273 | -0.30% | - | 10,304 | 10,348 | 10,260 | 1,169,725,791 |
| USD/CLP | 912.70 | +1.95% | -2.66% | 895.20 | 918.20 | 892.12 | - |
| COPPER | 6.29 | -3.47% | +30.12% | 6.51 | 6.54 | 6.25 | 60,833 |
| SQM-B | 69,340 | -0.45% | +129.60% | 69,655 | 70,600 | 68,295 | 739,400 |
| COPEC | 6,105 | -0.16% | -5.22% | 6,115 | 6,200 | 6,050 | 764,339 |
| BSANTANDER | 68.70 | +0.87% | +19.17% | 68.11 | 69.49 | 68.00 | 124,334,743 |
| FALABELLA | 5,511 | -1.13% | +17.26% | 5,574 | 5,637 | 5,422 | 2,965,854 |
| ENELAM | 75.35 | -1.58% | -16.74% | 76.56 | 77.01 | 74.87 | 59,652,122 |
| CENCOSUD | 2,110 | -2.31% | -34.25% | 2,160 | 2,160 | 2,105 | 2,750,175 |
| CMPC | 1,040 | -0.95% | -28.28% | 1,050 | 1,061 | 1,030 | 3,585,487 |
| BANCO CHILE | 165.21 | -0.18% | +17.47% | 165.50 | 167.89 | 164.68 | 80,453,117 |
| LATAM AIR | 22.12 | -0.63% | +21.74% | 22.26 | 22.69 | 22.01 | 710,009,934 |
| SOUTHERN COPPER | 172.97 | -10.88% | +87.45% | 194.09 | 187.06 | 172.30 | 1,895,731 |
The pressure came from two directions. The dollar rose against the Chilean peso and every other major regional currency, and the commodities that anchor Chile's export economy were sold hard - copper down 3.5%, lithium about 6%, with silver and gold also lower. For a copper-and-lithium economy, that is a direct hit.
Yet the index barely flinched. The most plausible read is that the IPSA's heavyweight domestic names - utilities, banks, retail - cushioned the blow from the miners, leaving the benchmark down a fraction while the commodity complex bled. That is the signature of a defensive, domestically anchored index on a risk-off day.
04 The commodity tape| Commodity | Change | Why it matters to Chile |
|---|---|---|
| Copper | −3.47% | Chile's top export |
| Lithium | −5.98% | A core export, hit hardest |
| Silver | −6.34% | Broad metals sell-off |
| Gold | −2.47% | Safe-haven also sold |
| Oil (Brent) | −2.04% | Weaker global demand signal |
This is the table that matters for Chile. Copper and lithium are the country's backbone and both fell hard; that the IPSA held suggests the sell-off stayed in the miners rather than spreading across the board.
05 The regional scoreboard| Index | Country | Change |
|---|---|---|
| Merval | Argentina | −2.83% |
| IPC | Mexico | −1.86% |
| Colcap | Colombia | −1.58% |
| Ibovespa | Brazil | −0.77% |
| IPSA | Chile | −0.30% |
Chile sat at the resilient end of a uniformly red board, the dollar's strength against all seven regional currencies confirming a top-down move that Santiago weathered better than its peers.
06 The technical pictureMomentum is soft but not extreme - the daily RSI near 37 sits below the midline but above the 30 that marks oversold, leaving room to fall before the tape is stretched.
The level that defines the session is the long-term trend support near 10,197, only a fraction below the close; the IPSA is effectively sitting on it. Holding keeps the year's uptrend intact, while a decisive break with copper still falling would be the first genuine crack and open the way toward the lower band.
07 What to watch-
10,197 support: the long-term line the index is sitting on - the single level that defines the next session.
Copper and lithium: with both still falling, the commodity tape is the read-through for whether the miners drag the index through support.
The peso at 912: a currency that keeps weakening pressures foreign returns; stabilisation would relieve it.
The regional dollar tape: whether the broad dollar bid extends or fades sets the tone for all of LatAm, Chile included.
It slipped just 0.30% to 10,273 as the dollar strengthened across Latin America and copper and lithium - Chile's main exports - were sold hard. Even so, it was the region's most resilient index.
Why did the IPSA hold up better than its peers?Its heavyweight domestic names - utilities, banks and retail - appear to have cushioned the blow from the miners, so the commodity rout hit the export complex more than the broad index.
What is happening with copper?Copper fell about 3.5% as part of a broad metals sell-off that also hit lithium, silver and gold - a direct headwind for Chile's export economy.
Is the IPSA oversold?Not yet. The daily RSI near 37 is soft but above the 30 oversold line, leaving room to fall before the tape is technically stretched.
What level should investors watch?The long-term trend support near 10,197, which the index is sitting on; holding it keeps the uptrend intact, while a break would be the first real crack.
Connected CoverageThe same dollar bid pulled Brazil lower too - see Brazil's Ibovespa fall to 169,019. The metals sell-off behind Chile's session is the subject of gold and silver crater again, and for the global frame see the Global Economy Briefing for June 6.
Reported by The Rio Times - Latin American financial news. Filed June 6, 2026, covering the June 5 trading session. Index, currency and commodity levels are session-close readings via the Rio Times market data feed (Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago and regional sources); technical readings are from the daily chart. Figures are point-in-time and not investment advice.
Read More from The Rio Times
- Argentina's Merval Drops 2.83% as a Record Run Cools - and the Peso Holds Brazil's Ibovespa Falls to 169,019 as a Strong Dollar Sweeps Latin America Global Economy Briefing - June 6, 2026
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