Mexican Peso Closes at 17.99/USD After Banxico's Latest Rate Cut

Continuing its strong run from last week when it first approached 18 per dollar, the Mexican peso edged up 0.02% to close at 17.99 against the US dollar on December 19, following a 25 basis point cut by the Bank of Mexico. Bank quotes show the dollar at 18.47, with analysts eyeing potential corrections amid rising dollar strength.

The peso's latest session on Friday, December 19, 2025, reflected resilience after Banxico's benchmark rate reduction. Official data shows a 0.02% gain (0.38 centavos), settling at 17.99 pesos per dollar, with a 0.07% weekly advance (1.32 centavos). This builds on the 15.6% appreciation in 2025 highlighted last week, amid solid fundamentals like record FDI, exports, and remittances.

Banamex quoted the dollar at 18.47 pesos for sale. Banco Base's Gabriela Siller noted the rate's stability around 18.00 but cautioned on downward pressures giving way to possible upward corrections.

Global context: The dollar index (DXY) rose 0.18% to 98.60, BBDXY up 0.15% to 1,209.32. US 10-year yields at 4.14%, Mexico's at 8.91%. Other currencies weakened: Russian ruble -0.42%, Philippine peso -0.30%, South Korean won -0.25%.

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Illustration of Banxico's interest rate cut to 6.75% amid market declines, peso depreciation, surging oil prices, and Middle East tensions including US-Iran conflict and Strait of Hormuz closure.
Image generated by AI

Banxico cuts interest rate to 6.75% despite inflation and Middle East tensions

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Mexico's central bank cut its benchmark rate to 6.75% in a split decision, as global markets closed lower amid the US-Iran war. The BMV fell 1.65%, and the peso depreciated 1% against the dollar. Oil prices rose due to the Strait of Hormuz closure.

The Mexican peso started the week with a slight depreciation against the dollar, closing at 17.1588 pesos per dollar on February 16, 2026, due to low liquidity levels from the U.S. holiday. This 0.08 percent drop occurred amid closed U.S. stock markets for Presidents' Day. Analysts indicate there is still room for the exchange rate to fall further, though the market takes profits near 17.11 pesos.

Reported by AI

The Mexican peso closed the trading day on Friday, February 6, with a 0.85% appreciation, settling at 17.2592 pesos per dollar, driven by global USD weakness and Banxico's decision to keep its rate at 7%. Analysts note this strength could hold in the 17.00-18.00 pesos range through the first quarter.

Wall Street ended Tuesday, February 17, 2026, with modest gains driven by the financial sector, while Mexico's Bolsa Mexicana de Valores fell 0.28%. The Mexican peso appreciated 0.17% against the dollar, trading at 17.13 units. European indices also closed positive, and oil prices declined.

Reported by AI

The dollar blue closed lower on Friday, January 9, 2026, reaching 1,505 pesos for selling, while the official dollar at Banco Nación stood at 1,490 pesos for selling. Other financial quotes like MEP, CCL, and crypto showed slight variations. In Córdoba, official rates matched the national ones.

Continuing its strong revaluation trend earlier in January—where it led emerging currencies with gains over 4% through January 22—the Colombian peso depreciated 1.36% on January 28, 2026, diverging from appreciating regional peers like the Brazilian real and Mexican peso. Despite the daily drop, it holds a 3.5% monthly gain amid global volatility and commodity rebounds.

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According to the Central Bank's Market Expectations Survey (REM), analysts project a gradual rise in the official exchange rate starting April 2026. The median estimate places the dollar at $1.452 in April, with moderate monthly increases. This adjustment will depend on inflation, economic policies, and external factors.

 

 

 

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