Split-image illustration showing Mexico's booming FDI inflows contrasting with industrial stagnation and GDP decline.
Split-image illustration showing Mexico's booming FDI inflows contrasting with industrial stagnation and GDP decline.
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Mexico's economy shows contrasts with record FDI and stagnation

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Mexico recorded a record foreign direct investment of 40,906 million dollars in the first nine months of 2025, a 14.5% increase from 2024. However, GDP contracted 0.3% in the third quarter and the IGAE fell 0.6% in September, indicating economic stagnation. Analysts warn of fragility in the industrial sector and risks to employment.

Recent data from the Secretariat of Economy reveal that foreign direct investment (FDI) in Mexico reached 40,906 million dollars from January to September 2025, a 14.5% annual increase that sets a new historical record for that period. New investments tripled to 6,563 million dollars, representing 16% of the total, while reinvestment of profits, though down 9.7% to 27,749 million, accounted for 67.8%. This strength persists despite tariffs imposed by the United States.

In bilateral trade, Mexico surpassed Canada as the top destination for U.S. exports, with 226,411 million dollars from January to August 2025, slightly above the 225,642 million to Canada. This reflects integration into global value chains and a favorable tariff position.

However, economic growth presents a negative outlook. INEGI reported that GDP contracted 0.3% quarterly in July-September 2025, revised down from a previous 0.4% advance, and 0.2% annually versus 2024. Cumulative January-September, GDP grew only 0.4% annually. The Global Economic Activity Indicator (IGAE) fell 0.6% in September both monthly and annually, reversing August's 0.4%; the industrial sector dropped 3.3% annually with seven consecutive months of decline, services advanced 0.7%, and agriculture 7.4%. For October, the estimate indicates zero growth.

Banco Base analysts highlight industrial fragility, with risks to employment in construction and manufacturing, and deterioration in services like retail and transportation. 'The recent figures demonstrate that economic activity continues to weaken,' they state. The January-September IGAE cumulative shows only 0.12% growth, the lowest since 2020. These signals suggest a slowdown that could reduce annual growth below the expected 0.5%.

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Illustration of Mexico's economy showing GDP contraction with charts and Mexico City skyline
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Mexico economy contracts 0.6 percent in first quarter of 2026

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Mexico's gross domestic product fell 0.6 percent in the first quarter compared with the prior period, according to final Inegi data released Friday. The contraction was smaller than expected and revives debate over possible further rate cuts by Banxico.

Foreign direct investment in Mexico hit a record 40,871 million dollars in 2025, up 7.7 percent from revised 2024 figures. Yet the fourth quarter saw a negative flow of 5,026 million dollars, the first since records began. The Secretaría de Economía attributes this to dividend payments and financial operations, not investment cancellations.

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Mexico recorded a historic inflow of 40,871 million dollars in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) during 2025, a 10.8 percent increase from the previous year. The Secretariat of Economy noted that this flow positions the country as a strategic destination for global productive capital, despite a 2 percent decline in developing economies. The growth was mainly driven by new investments that rose 133 percent.

The Mexican peso appreciated 0.07% against the dollar on April 27, closing at 17.38 units, due to stalled negotiations between the United States and Iran. President Donald Trump canceled the second round of talks scheduled in Pakistan, while Iranian representatives traveled to Russia. Global markets showed mixed reactions to the uncertainty.

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Marcelo Ebrard, secretary of Economy, stated that Mexico will improve its relative position against the United States due to Donald Trump's announced 10 percent global tariff. The official noted that the average effective tariffs on Mexican exports will drop from 4.1 percent to around 2 percent. Meanwhile, Mexico's inflation rose to 3.92 percent in the first half of February, driven by new taxes and tariffs on Asian imports.

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