Mario Farren calls for relaxing maximum conventional rate at BancoEstado

Mario Farren, BancoEstado's new president, asked the Financial Market Commission to relax the Maximum Conventional Rate to bancarize 200,000 more families. In an interview with La Tercera, he announced measures against fuel price hikes and plans to exceed last year's mortgage financing. Farren emphasized client service and operational security as priorities.

Mario Farren took over as BancoEstado president three weeks ago, nominated by José Antonio Kast's government. With 27 years at Citi and former Banking Superintendent, Farren expressed enthusiasm for the institution. "It has been an honor, a responsibility, and a pleasure," he said in a La Tercera interview published April 5.

Addressing the recent fuel price hike, BancoEstado launched credits with up to six months grace for mipymes and transporters, plus preferential financing for electromobility. Farren announced upcoming payments of the taxi and colectivo bonus via Bolsillo Combustibles. He also pushes QR payment interoperability with other banks.

In housing, he aims to surpass last year's 31,500 mortgage loans and 60 million UF, coordinating with Finance and Housing ministries. He proposed reviewing risk weights and CMF's LTV table over 80% to ease access without bubbles.

Farren warned of card fraud raising product costs and requested measures like lower thresholds or insurance. He called to relax the TMC, estimating it would bancarize 200,000 more families at BancoEstado alone, while measuring impact to prevent de-bancarization. President Kast prioritizes client service; Finance Minister Jorge Quiroz, operational security.

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Banco de la República board announcing 100 basis point interest rate hike to 10.25% due to inflation from minimum wage increase, with concerned Finance Minister.
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Banco de la República hikes interest rate to 10.25% amid inflation surge and minimum wage controversy

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Colombia's Banco de la República raised its intervention rate by 100 basis points to 10.25%—the highest in over a year—in its first 2026 board meeting, citing persistent inflation above 5% for nearly six months and unanchored expectations from a 23.8% minimum wage hike decreed by President Petro's government. The decision, with a split 4-2-1 vote, drew market surprise and government criticism over economic contraction risks.

President Gustavo Petro presented on X several proposals to counter the effects of the Banco de la República's reference rate hike to 11.25%, which he called unconstitutional. Measures include subsidies for fertilizers, low-rate housing policies, and land distribution to peasants. He also called for self-regulation in fuel consumption amid the Middle East war.

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Following the Banco de la República's decision to maintain interest rates at 9.25%, President Gustavo Petro accused the bank of favoring financial interests over progressive economics and workers, claiming the policy effectively raises real rates amid falling inflation.

The Board of Directors of the Banco de la República voted by majority to keep the policy interest rate at 9.25% in its final meeting of the year, amid ongoing inflationary pressures above 5%. Two members, including Finance Minister Germán Ávila, favored a 50 basis point cut. Inflation eased slightly to 5.3% in November, but future expectations rose.

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Argentina's central bank cut short-term reference rates to 20% this month, below inflation levels, to capitalize on dollar inflows and rebuild hard currency reserves. President Javier Milei's government aims to boost economic growth amid slowdown signals. Analysts note concerns over peso stability impacts.

The Finance Secretariat called an auction to renew nearly $15 trillion in debt on November 26. The Central Bank cut interest rates to 20% TNA and eased bank reserve requirements to encourage bond purchases. These steps aim to absorb liquidity, extend maturities, and boost economic activity.

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Opposition senators criticized President José Antonio Kast's National Reconstruction Plan, labeling it a 'hidden tax counter-reform' due to tax cuts that would defund the state by up to US$2.8 billion annually. In a tense La Moneda meeting, they warned against rollbacks on social rights. The bill is expected to enter Congress on April 1.

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