Colombian peso leads emerging currency revaluation in early 2026

Building on its strong 2025 performance as the fourth strongest emerging currency, the Colombian peso has appreciated 3.8% in the first 14 days of January 2026, leading the pack. It outperforms the Chilean peso (2.8%) and Argentine peso (1%), driven by government external debt issuance and favorable US inflation data.

Continuing its momentum from 2025—when it appreciated 18.3% against the USD amid global dollar weakness—the Colombian peso has strengthened further, gaining 3.8% in early January 2026. This positions it ahead of peers like the Chilean peso (2.8%) and Argentine peso (1%), with advances also in the Brazilian real, Costa Rican colon, and Mexican peso, reflecting capital inflows and positive monetary outlooks.

In contrast, the Paraguayan guaraní fell 9.6%, and the Dominican peso 0.4%. On January 13, the dollar opened at $3,705, dropping to $3,626.55; on January 14, it started at $3,630 (below the TRM of $3,663.24), hitting a low of $3,610 and high of $3,666.5 after 794 trades totaling US$677.1 million.

Key drivers include the government's record US$5 billion external debt issuance (largest in history, with 3-, 5-, and 7-year maturities), converting dollars to pesos and increasing supply, as noted by Mauricio Acevedo of Corficolombiana. Globally, US inflation at 2.7% (core below expectations) supports Federal Reserve rate cut forecasts by mid-2026. Colombia's minimum wage hike may fuel local inflation, potentially leading to steady or higher rates, attracting investment amid US political uncertainty, per Gregorio Gandini.

US retail sales rose in November on cars and holidays, with slight wholesale inflation uptick unlikely to sway Fed policy, according to Clark Bellin of Bellwether Wealth. Acevedo highlights the absence of negative news as ideal for the peso's trend.

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Trading floor scene illustrating Colombian peso's 1.36% drop amid regional currency gains and January volatility.
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Colombian peso decouples from peers amid January volatility

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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.

Building on its 3.8% gain in the first 14 days of January, the Colombian peso has appreciated further by 4.5% over the first 22 days, maintaining its top position among emerging currencies. New international factors like Donald Trump's Greenland comments and a national pension decree bolster the trend, with the Chilean peso (3.8%) and Russian ruble (3.79%) trailing.

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The Colombian peso appreciated 18.3% against the dollar in 2025, ranking as the fourth strongest emerging currency of the year. This strength was driven by a globally weakened dollar and local factors like remittances and exports. The exchange rate dropped from a high of $4,416.69 in April to a low of $3,706.94 in December.

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.

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The Colombian peso closed higher on Wednesday, driven by oil price volatility following President Donald Trump's announcement of a blockade on sanctioned tankers to Venezuela. Crude prices rose over 2%, with Brent at US$60.33 per barrel. President Gustavo Petro warned that a drop to US$55 per barrel would make oil production in Colombia unprofitable.

Argentina's Central Bank released its latest Market Expectations Survey, drawing from 45 analysts' projections, estimating 2.4% inflation for January 2026 and a dollar rate of $1,475 in February.

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The dollar exchange rate has fallen by $55 since the start of the year, despite the Central Bank's purchases adding over US$1,600 million to its reserves. Financial quotations are also losing ground in this context.

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