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.