• The Mexican Peso is  weakening ahead of the Bank of Mexico policy meeting. 
  • Mexican labor and trade data beat estimates but only partially recoup MXN’s losses. 
  • USD/MXN completes an ABC correction higher and reaches a critical turning point.

The Mexican Peso (MXN) trades lower on Thursday continuing a run of two straight days of depreciation. The Bank of Mexico (Banxico) monetary policy meeting is scheduled to end at 19:00 GMT with an announcement of the Banxico’s policy decision, a potentially market-moving event for the Peso. 

Mexican economic data comes out better than expected on Thursday. The Unemployment Rate remains at 2.6% in May when analysts had expected a rise to 2.7%. The Balance of Trade, meanwhile, edges into surplus territory, with $1.99 billion reading when analysts had expected it to show a deficit, according to data from INEGI. The Peso only appreciates marginally after the good news however before renewing its slide.

At the time of writing, one US Dollar (USD) buys 18.42 Mexican Pesos, EUR/MXN is trading at 19.76, and GBP/MXN at 23.33.

Mexican Peso trades flat after two-day drop

The Mexican Peso trades down in the run-up to the Banxico policy meeting on Thursday.  An overwhelming majority of economists expect the central bank to maintain its policy interest rate at its current 11.00% level. Of the 25 economists surveyed by Bloomberg, 23 expect the central bank to keep interest rates unchanged. A recent survey by Mexican lender Citibanamex showed that the majority of respondents expect Banxico to keep its policy rate unchanged – although most expect a cut in August.

The high interest-rate differential between Mexico and most major economies has kept the Mexican Peso strong. Relatively higher interest rates attract greater inflows of foreign capital. Therefore, deciding not to cut interest rates might be bullish for the Peso, although given that this outcome has been widely predicted, the market may already have priced it in.

Many analysts have changed their minds about Banxico cutting interest rates due to the sharp depreciation in the Peso after the June 2 election. They now see imported inflation as a factor further weighing against immediate interest-rate cuts. 

Rabobank’s Senior Strategist Christian Lawrence was one analyst who expected Banxico to cut interest rates in June. However, he changed his opinion in light of the sharp devaluation of the Mexican Peso since the election, which “has acted as a de facto cut.” 

The same goes for economists at Standard Chartered: “We now expect Banco de México (Banxico) to stay on hold instead of cutting by 25bps at its 27 June meeting, amid sharp currency depreciation driven by elevated political noise and fiscal uncertainty,” said the bank in a recent note. 

Technical Analysis: USD/MXN completes ABC correction and reaches crossroads

USD/MXN has completed an ABC corrective pattern higher on the 4-hour chart. 

The pair is now at a critical juncture. If it continues to make higher highs, it could mean the short-term downtrend has reversed. Alternatively, a recapitulation would suggest the downtrend is resuming, and the pair could move to lower lows. 

USD/MXN 4-hour Chart 

A move below 18.06 (June 26 low) would suggest the downtrend was resuming and probably see a continuation down to 17.87 (June 24 low). 

At the same time, the short-term trend remains bearish, leaving the pair at risk of a recapitulation lower. Further weakness could see it reach the 17.72 swing low made on June 4.

Alternatively, if USD/MXN rallies and breaks above 18.39 (June 26 high), it would form a higher high and suggest a new short-term uptrend was evolving. Resistance at 18.48 (2023 October 6 high) and 18.68 (June 14 high) might supply upside targets afterward.

The direction of the long and intermediate-term trends remains in doubt. 

Economic Indicator

Central Bank Interest Rate

The Bank of Mexico announces a key interest rate which affects the whole range of interest rates set by commercial banks, building societies and other institutions for their own savers and borrowers.  Generally speaking, if the central bank is hawkish about the inflationary outlook of the economy and rises the interest rates it is positive, or bullish, for the Mexican Peso.

Read more.

Next release: Thu Jun 27, 2024 19:00

Frequency: Irregular

Consensus: 11%

Previous: 11%

Source: Banxico

 

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