Illustration of rising dollar exchange rate to 1460 with financial charts and currency notes.
Illustration of rising dollar exchange rate to 1460 with financial charts and currency notes.
Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

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 official dollar recorded a new rise and closed the week higher in both the wholesale and retail segments. The wholesale exchange rate advanced $3.50 on Friday, June 5, to $1,440 and reached its highest level since February 5. The blue dollar traded steady at $1,410 for purchase and $1,435 for sale. Meanwhile, the contado con liquidación reached $1,515.88 and the MEP climbed to $1,459.83. The Central Bank purchased US$45 million in the foreign exchange market. International reserves fell by US$502 million and closed at US$47.867 million.

Ohun tí àwọn ènìyàn ń sọ

X users posted neutral updates on the official dollar closing at $1,460 on June 5, comparing it to blue dollar ($1,435) and other rates. Some highlighted weekly rises or asked about future trends, with mostly factual reports and minimal opinion.

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Photorealistic image of Buenos Aires traders amid rising dollar rates, official and blue dollar at $1,420 after weekly gain.
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Official and blue dollar close at $1,420 after weekly rise

Ti AI ṣe iroyin Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

The official dollar quoted at $1,420 for selling on Friday April 24, marking an increase from the previous week. The blue dollar also closed at $1,420, up $10. Financial dollars showed similar rises on a day of high trading volume.

The blue dollar ended the Friday May 22 session without changes in its quotation. The Central Bank bought dollars and international reserves increased.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

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.

The US dollar closed higher against the Colombian peso at $3,576.10, up $2.80 from the TRM of $3,573.30. The rise followed a new government repurchase of global bonds, the third in the past year. Meanwhile, crude oil prices fell amid expectations of US-Iran peace talks.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

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

The Mexican peso appreciated 0.07% against the dollar on April 27, closing at 17.38 units, due to stalled negotiations between the United States and Iran. President Donald Trump canceled the second round of talks scheduled in Pakistan, while Iranian representatives traveled to Russia. Global markets showed mixed reactions to the uncertainty.

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