Updated
Updated · Reuters · Jun 17
Latin American Stocks Rise 1.7% as Fed Looms and Brazil Eyes 25-Basis-Point Cut
Updated
Updated · Reuters · Jun 17

Latin American Stocks Rise 1.7% as Fed Looms and Brazil Eyes 25-Basis-Point Cut

3 articles · Updated · Reuters · Jun 17

Summary

  • MSCI’s Latin American stock index climbed 1.7% and the region’s currency gauge added 0.4%, reversing the prior session’s losses as investors waited for the Federal Reserve’s decision later Wednesday.
  • Kevin Warsh’s first Fed meeting is widely expected to leave rates unchanged, but traders are bracing for dollar volatility while weighing U.S.-Iran truce uncertainty after Donald Trump said the deal was not final.
  • Brazil’s Bovespa rose 1% and the real gained 0.6% ahead of an expected third straight 25-basis-point rate cut, while policymakers still grapple with persistent inflation.
  • Chile’s peso rose 0.5% for a seventh straight gain even after the central bank cut its 2026 growth forecast to 1.0%-1.75%; the bank had held rates at 4.5% for a fourth meeting on Tuesday.
  • Argentina’s stocks added 0.8%, with broader regional sentiment also supported by a World Bank-backed package that could mobilize up to $2 billion for the country and by efforts to diversify trade beyond the U.S.

Insights

Under its new hawkish chair, is the Federal Reserve signaling a prolonged era of high interest rates despite slowing global growth?
As China becomes a top trade partner, can Latin America successfully pivot from U.S. economic influence and chart its own growth path?
With the Strait of Hormuz reopening, will the fragile U.S.-Iran peace deal truly end the global energy shock and tame persistent inflation?