Mexican Peso Rebounds on Risk Appetite

2026-03-23 17:59 By Felipe Alarcon 1 min. read

The Mexican peso appreciated toward 17.7 per US dollar as a broad improvement in global risk appetite and a sharp retreat in the greenback provided a reprieve for emerging market assets.

This recovery was largely driven by a significant narrowing of the dollar's safe-haven premium after President Trump postponed military strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure for five days following productive negotiations.

Locally, the peso found additional support from Mexican retail sales rising a strong 5% annually in January, a figure that significantly beat market expectations and highlighted domestic economic resilience despite elevated borrowing costs.

While the peso previously hit a three-month low of 18.08 on fears of a Strait of Hormuz closure, the easing of geopolitical tensions triggered a collapse in Brent crude prices that cooled the inflationary outlook.

These developments reinforced the Bank of Mexico's hawkish stance.



News Stream
Mexican Peso Rebounds on Risk Appetite
The Mexican peso appreciated toward 17.7 per US dollar as a broad improvement in global risk appetite and a sharp retreat in the greenback provided a reprieve for emerging market assets. This recovery was largely driven by a significant narrowing of the dollar's safe-haven premium after President Trump postponed military strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure for five days following productive negotiations. Locally, the peso found additional support from Mexican retail sales rising a strong 5% annually in January, a figure that significantly beat market expectations and highlighted domestic economic resilience despite elevated borrowing costs. While the peso previously hit a three-month low of 18.08 on fears of a Strait of Hormuz closure, the easing of geopolitical tensions triggered a collapse in Brent crude prices that cooled the inflationary outlook. These developments reinforced the Bank of Mexico's hawkish stance.
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The Mexican peso appreciated toward 17.7 per US dollar as a collective retreat in global bond yields and a softening greenback provided a reprieve for emerging market assets ahead of several major central bank decisions. This recovery is largely driven by a significant narrowing of the dollar's safe haven premium after allies like Japan and Australia declined to join a US led maritime coalition to reopen the Strait of Hormuz which suggested a lower risk of immediate regional escalation. Locally the peso finds strong fundamental support from a 3.25% interest rate differential with the US after Mexico's annual inflation accelerated to 4.02% in February to exceed the central bank's upper tolerance threshold for the first time in eight months. These persistent price pressures led by a 9.88% surge in agricultural costs have effectively priced out a March interest rate cut and reinforced expectations for a hawkish pause by the Bank of Mexico.
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