Mexican Peso dives as Banxico signals aggressive easing

FX
  • Mexican Peso faces pressure after Banxico’s dovish shift suggests larger, and possibly quicker, interest rate cuts.
  • Mixed inflation data from INEGI maintains uncertainty, adding to Peso’s volatility in light trading conditions.
  • Interest rate differential concerns increase as Banxico’s potential 150 bps cuts contrast with the Fed’s more conservative 57 bps easing outlook.

The Mexican Peso loses some ground against the US Dollar on Thursday after the Banco de Mexico (Banxico) hinted that interest rates could be reduced faster in some meetings. This and the disinflation progress weighed on the Peso despite thin trading in observance of the funeral of former US President Jimmy Carter. The USD/MXN trades at 20.50, up 0.55%.

The Instituto Nacional de Estadística Geografía e Informatica (INEGI) revealed that inflation figures were mixed. However, Banxico turned dovish, while a member said it was necessary to increase the size of the rate cuts.

Therefore, the Peso would be at risk of further depreciation due to the reduction of the interest rate differential between Mexico and the US. Although Federal Reserve (Fed) officials stated they are in an easing cycle, but market players are eyeing just 57 basis points (bps) of easing in the US this year against 150 bps by Banxico.

Daily digest market movers: Mexican Peso weakened by dovish tone of Banxico minutes

  • Banxico’s meeting minutes revealed the evolution of disinflation, suggesting that the easing cycle might continue to reduce the restiveness of monetary policy. To achieve that, the Governing board stated, “larger downward adjustments could be considered in some meetings.”
  • Mexico’s central bank improved the inflation outlook due to the progress in headline and core inflation. Officials acknowledged that services inflation decreased, and they expect CPI to converge to its 3% goal in Q3 2026.
  • INEGI revealed that December’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) dipped to 0.38% MoM below estimates of 0.40% and the prior month’s 0.44% jump. Core CPI in the same period increased by 0.51%, up from 0.05% in the prior reading and above the forecasted 0.45%.
  • On an annual basis, headline inflation came in at 4.21%, missing projections of 4.28% and was beneath November’s 4.55% reading. Excluding volatile items, inflation modestly increased from 3.58% to 3.65%, exceeding expectations of 3.62%.
  • On Wednesday, the Fed revealed its December Meeting Minutes. Officials opted to reduce borrowing costs by 25 basis points, but the minutes showed that “some participants saw merit in maintaining rates at current levels, citing the heightened risk of persistently high inflation.”
  • Despite this, policymakers expected inflation to continue moving toward the US central bank’s 2% goal, although they acknowledged potential changes in trade and immigration policy. Several officials noted that the disinflationary process “stalled.” The Minutes underscored that Fed officials opened the door to slowing the pace of interest rate cuts.

USD/MXN technical outlook: Mexican Peso remains heavy as USD/MXN climbs above 20.35

The USD/MXN uptrend remains intact. During the week, sellers tried to push the exchange rate below the 50-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) of 20.29 but failed as the pair found acceptance near the 20.40 to 20.50 range.

If buyers clear the top of the range, the next resistance would be last year’s high of 20.83, followed by the current yearly high of 20.90. On further strength, the USD/MXN could test 21.00, ahead of the March 8, 2022 high at 21.46.

Conversely, if USD/MXN tumbles below the 50-day SMA, the next support would be the 20.00 figure, ahead of the 100-day SMA at 19.93, followed by the 19.50 figure.

Economic Indicator

12-Month Inflation

The 12-month inflation index released by the Bank of Mexico is a measure of price movements by the comparison between the retail prices of a representative shopping basket of goods and services. The purchase power of Mexican Peso is dragged down by inflation. The inflation index is a key indicator since it is used by the central bank to set interest rates. Generally speaking, a high reading is seen as positive (or bullish) for the Mexican Peso, while a low reading is seen as negative (or Bearish).

Read more.

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