BMV and Wall Street close lower amid Middle East tensions

Mexico's Bolsa Mexicana de Valores (BMV) fell 1.63% on Friday, March 20, 2026, closing at 64,134.9 units on the IPC, while Wall Street saw declines led by the Nasdaq at 2.01%. Weekly losses hit 2.31% for the BMV and about 2% for US indices, amid the Middle East war driving up oil prices.

Wall Street closed Friday, March 20, 2026, with declines: Nasdaq down 2.01% to 21,647.61 points, S&P 500 1.51% to 6,506.48, and Dow Jones 0.96% to 45,577.47. Weekly, the three indices lost about 2% due to volatility from the Middle East war and its oil effects, per El Financiero. Monex analysts noted that 'global equity markets showed negative movements, maintaining caution due to geopolitical instability in the Middle East, mainly supply chain disruptions strengthening inflation concerns'.In Mexico, the BMV fell 1.63%, with the IPC at 64,134.9 units; weekly -2.31%, chaining five down weeks and 10.5% over the last three. FTSE-BIVA dropped 1.68% to 1,276.29. The Mexican peso depreciated 1.18% or 1.22% (per sources), closing at 17.95 or 17.9557 per dollar per Banxico; in bank windows, 18.38 per Banamex. Banco Base's Gabriela Siller attributed the drop to 'risk aversion from the war, as Iran continued attacks against neighboring countries: UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Kuwait', impacting oil production and blocking the Strait of Hormuz.Oil rose: WTI +2.44% to $97.90 per barrel; Brent +3.40% to $112.33. Fed officials like Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman expressed caution on inflation and support for rate cuts. Global markets also fell: Nikkei -3.38% to 53,372.53; DAX -2.01% to 22,380.19.

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Dramatic scene of panicked traders at Seoul's stock exchange amid Kospi crash due to US-Iran conflict.
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Asian markets plunge amid US-Iran war

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Asian stock markets opened in the red on Wednesday due to the US-Iran conflict, with South Korea experiencing a historic plunge in its Kospi index. Positive US employment data boosted gains in Wall Street and the Mexican Stock Exchange. President Claudia Sheinbaum assured that Mexico is working to prevent fuel price increases.

Wall Street markets closed mixed on January 7, 2026, with the Dow Jones falling 0.94% amid US labor market data. In Mexico, the S&P/BMV IPC index of the Mexican Stock Exchange dipped 0.23% to 64,871.70 points. The Nasdaq edged up 0.16%.

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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.

Bitcoin held around $68,000 on Tuesday, March 3, showing resilience after Monday's rally, as global stocks tumbled on renewed Middle East tensions. The Nasdaq and S&P 500 fell over 2%, gold dropped sharply, and the U.S. dollar strengthened amid risk-off moves.

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Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, involving the US, Israel, and Iran, have triggered a slide in Asian shares and a surge in oil prices. Investors are turning to the US dollar for safety amid fears of prolonged energy cost increases and inflation. While emerging markets face short-term losses, experts see long-term resilience.

Following initial US and Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28, 2026, weekend attacks reportedly killed Ayatollah Ali Jamenei, prompting Iran's Revolutionary Guard to threaten closing the Strait of Hormuz. Mexico's export mix hit $66.63 per barrel on March 2—the highest in seven months—as global markets reacted with risk aversion; Mexico activated a gasoline price contingency plan.

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The DAX gained 0.5 percent on Monday, closing at 23,564 points, despite concerns over a possible escalation in the Iran war. US President Trump demanded support from NATO partners. The German government rejects deploying warships.

 

 

 

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