% and its regional equity index gained 1.4%, while the broader MSCI Emerging Markets index slipped slightly.
Colombia showed why different assets can send different signals. The peso strengthened 0.9% to 3,308.63 per dollar, but the COLCAP fell 0.33% as Ecopetrol, the state-controlled oil producer that carries big weight in the index, dropped 1.6%. Stocks in commodity exporters tend to move with oil-linked profit expectations, while currencies can be driven by global “carry” demand, when investors hold higher-yielding local assets as long as risk appetite stays OK.
Elsewhere, Brazil’s real rose 0.5% and its Bovespa gained 1% after Finance Minister Dario Durigan said a decision on removing the gasoline subsidy was delayed until next week. Chile’s peso climbed as copper hit a two-week high, Mexico’s peso edged up after June inflation cooled into the central bank’s target range, and Peru’s equities rose ahead of a rate decision expected to keep borrowing costs unchanged.
Why should I care?
For markets: Colombia’s peso hit 3,308.63 per dollar even as Ecopetrol slid 1.6%.
Oil pullbacks don’t hit every Colombian asset the same way. The COLCAP is unusually sensitive to Ecopetrol, so even a modest dip in crude can drag the index by lowering near-term earnings expectations for its biggest oil exposure.
The peso isn’t just an oil trade. It also reflects whether global investors still want higher-yield local exposure. When those inflows stick, the currency can strengthen even while oil-linked equities soften.
That divergence is a useful signal across Latin America: it can suggest markets see the oil move as manageable for now, even if energy-heavy stock benchmarks feel the pressure first.
