Dollar closes lower in Colombia ahead of presidential runoff

The dollar closed Monday at 3,581.45 pesos in Colombia, down 6.64 pesos from the representative market rate, two weeks before the presidential runoff.

The currency recorded a low of 3,565.02 pesos and a high of 3,595 during the session, with 1,619 transactions totaling US$1.225 million. The runoff is scheduled for June 21. Current polls place Abelardo de la Espriella, a pro-market candidate, in the lead, though the outcome remains uncertain. On the previous Friday the DANE reported that May inflation rose to 5.84% from 5.68% in April. According to Mauricio Acevedo of Corficolombiana, this figure makes it harder for the central bank to cut rates, which stand at 11.25%.

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Illustration of rising dollar exchange rate to 1460 with financial charts and currency notes.
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Official dollar closed the week higher and reached $1,460

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The official retail dollar closed at $1,460 on Friday, June 5, while the wholesale exchange rate rose $3.50 to $1,440.

The local currency ended the June 5 session at 3,588.12 pesos, up 22.8 pesos from the TRM of 3,565.32 pesos.

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Between May 1 and 15, the Colombian peso recorded a 3.84% depreciation, the largest among 22 emerging currencies. The dollar reached 3,796.78 pesos, driven by purchases from the Finance Ministry and electoral uncertainty.

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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President Gustavo Petro stated that the strong revaluation of the Colombian peso, with the dollar at $3,578 on Tuesday, stems from the Banco de la República's interest rate hike. He noted it cheapens external debt and imports but raises export costs. Petro warned it could undermine poverty reduction efforts.

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