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

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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 ended May 21 with a modest depreciation, shaped by Banxico meeting minutes and Middle East developments.

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The exchange rate closed on May 12 at 17.2228 pesos per dollar, marking a 0.14 percent depreciation.

The Philippine peso closed at P61.30 against the US dollar on Tuesday, April 28, marking a new record low amid global uncertainties from the Middle East conflict.

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The Philippine peso closed at a record low of P60.10 against the US dollar on Thursday, March 19, amid surging global oil prices from the Middle East conflict. The weakening currency raises costs for imports, especially oil which the country heavily relies on.

The dollar blue closed higher on Monday April 27, rising $10 in the week's first trading session. According to Perfil, it quoted at $1.410 for buying and $1.430 for selling. Other financial dollars also showed variations.

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Wall Street markets closed higher on Thursday April 16, boosted by optimism over an Israel-Lebanon agreement ending the Middle East war, while Mexico's Bolsa Mexicana de Valores (BMV) fell 0.78%. The BMV's main IPC index settled at 69,095.02 points. The Mexican peso appreciated 0.05% against the dollar.

 

 

 

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