LatAm Pre-Open: Latin America Leads a Worldwide Relief Rally With Argentina Soaring

By The Rio Times | Created at 2026-06-12 05:52:01 | Updated at 2026-06-12 15:35:36 9 hours ago

Key Facts

  • What the world’s markets decided. After a war-rattled, fearful week, markets snapped back together in a worldwide relief rally — Wall Street jumped (S&P 500 +1.75%, Nasdaq +2.54%), Wall Street’s fear gauge crashed −12.51% to 19.44, and the rally rolled into Asia, where South Korea’s KOSPI soared +7.70%. The triggers were a halt in the Iran-Israel fighting and cooler-than-feared US inflation.
  • How big and how broad. This was an “everything rally” that lifted almost every region at once — Latin America led the world (up about +3.8% as a group), followed by Asia and the Middle East, with Europe and the US close behind. Even gold rose +3.13% as cooler inflation pulled interest rates down and lifted nearly all assets together.
  • The standout move. Argentina exploded — its banks jumped between 11% and 14% in a single day (BBVA Argentina +14.33%, Supervielle +12.73%, Banco Macro +11.69%, Galicia +11.67%) on growing hopes of an upgrade to “emerging market” status that could pull in around $1 billion of new money. It was the single most extreme move in the entire global scan.
  • The clue in the wider scan. Two things did not join the party — oil tumbled −4.07% as the war premium drained away, and crypto sat the rally out entirely, with Bitcoin flat at about 63,400 and Ethereum slipping to a weekly low near 1,666. When stocks rip worldwide but crypto stalls, it is worth noticing.
  • What it means for Latin America. The region was the day’s biggest winner — Brazil’s US-listed shares rose +3.05%, Mexico’s market +3.35%, Chile +4.60% and Colombia +5.48%, while their currencies firmed (the Colombian peso +2.09%). Falling oil is the one mixed note, easing inflation for the region but trimming Brazil’s Petrobras.

A week that began with war fears and an Asian market crash ended with the opposite: a ceasefire and cooler inflation set off a relief rally that lifted almost every market in the world at once. Latin America led the charge, with Argentina’s banks soaring up to 14% on hopes of an emerging-market upgrade, and the only notable holdouts were oil, which fell as the war premium faded, and crypto, which strangely sat the whole thing out.

 Latin America Leads a Worldwide Relief Rally With Argentina SoaringLatAm Pre-Open: Latin America Leads a Worldwide Relief Rally With Argentina Soaring

01 A worldwide relief rally

After a tense, war-shadowed week, the mood flipped completely on Thursday. Two pieces of good news arrived together — the fighting between Iran and Israel paused, and US inflation came in cooler than investors had feared.

The result was a powerful bounce. The S&P 500 rose +1.75% to 7,394, the Nasdaq +2.54% and the Dow +1.86%, while Wall Street’s fear gauge, the VIX, tumbled −12.51% to 19.44 as the panic of recent days drained away.

The clearest sign of the change was chips. The semiconductor group that had crashed last week roared back +8.39%, and Nvidia rose +2.22%, as the ceasefire and softer inflation revived appetite for the riskiest, fastest-growing corner of the market.

The rally then swept through Asia overnight. South Korea’s KOSPI, which had fallen so hard last week that trading was halted, jumped +7.70%, while Japan’s Nikkei rose +3.51% and Hong Kong +1.83%.

Cooler inflation did something unusual: it lifted almost everything at once. Because softer prices push interest rates down, US government bonds rose, gold climbed +3.13%, and stocks rallied together — a rare day when nearly every kind of asset moved up.

The one big exception was oil, and that was the point. Crude tumbled −4.07% as the threat of a wider war faded, which removed the inflation fear that had hung over markets and helped fuel the rally everywhere else. (Editorial note: the day-to-day links here are built from the price moves and the dated news; align with the prior published edition before filing.)

02 The mood dashboard

What we measure Reading 30d Pct In plain terms
Fear gauge (the VIX) 19.44 n/a Crashed −12.51% as the war fear drained — though still above its calm levels.
Breadth (how much rose together) very broad n/a Almost every region and asset rose — a true “everything rally.”
Regional leader Latin America n/a LatAm gained about +3.8% as a group, ahead of Asia, Europe and the US.
Safe-haven demand (gold, bonds) rose anyway n/a Gold +3.13% and bonds higher — cooler inflation lifted shelters and stocks alike.
The holdouts oil, crypto n/a Oil fell −4.07% as war fear faded; crypto sat the rally out.
Sector leadership chips + growth n/a Money rushed back into semiconductors and tech; energy was the laggard.

The dashboard’s headline is how broad the rally was. It is unusual for stocks, bonds and gold to all rise strongly on the same day, and it happened because cooler inflation helped every one of them.

The second signal is the fear gauge. A −12.51% drop is a big one-day fall, the financial equivalent of a held breath being let out after a scare.

The most useful detail for the days ahead is the leadership. With chips and growth stocks back in front and energy lagging, this looked like a return of confidence rather than a defensive crouch.
Live Market IntelligenceLatin America — Cross-Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.

Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence

Latin America — Cross-Market Board

Regional
Jun 12, 2026 · 02:51

Ibovespa · benchmark

171,497 +1.71%

+25.06% over 12 months

Market breadth · 5 names

100% advancing

5 ▲ advancing0 declining ▼

Currencies, rates & key inputs

Latin America scoreboard

IndexLastTodayStrength

IbovespaBrazil 171,497 +1.71%

S&P/BMV IPCMexico 66,977 +3.33%

S&P IPSAChile 10,741 +2.75%

S&P MERVALArgentina 3,353,008 +6.34%

MSCI COLCAPColombia 2,350.77 +3.90%

BVL S&P PerúPeru 34,937.73 +0.29%

Full instrument board

InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
IBOV 171,497 +1.71% +25.06% 168,619
IPSA 10,741 +2.75% 10,453
IPC MEX 66,977 +3.33% +15.94% 64,822
MERVAL 3,353,008 +6.34% +54.43% 3,153,150
COLCAP 2,350.77 +3.90% 9.04 9.05 9.02 4,133
BVL PERÚ 34,937.73 +0.29%
USD/BRL 5.10 +0.09% -7.87% 5.10 5.12 5.10
EUR/BRL 5.90 -1.41% -7.31% 5.98 5.93 5.90
USD/MXN 17.26 +0.04% -8.67% 17.25 17.26 17.22
USD/CLP 904.40 -1.04% -3.13% 913.87 904.40 904.40
USD/COP 3,484 -2.09% -16.58% 3,559 3,484 3,484
USD/PEN 3.40 -0.05% -6.43% 3.40 3.40 3.39
USD/ARS 1,432 -0.03% +21.15% 1,433 1,432 1,432
USD/UYU 40.67 +1.66% -0.60% 40.01 40.67 40.67
USD/PYG 6,120 +0.89% -22.21% 6,066 6,120 6,120
USD/BOB 6.86 +1.78% +1.82% 6.74 6.86 6.86
USD/DOP 58.53 +0.83% -0.46% 58.05 58.53 58.39
USD/CRC 451.82 +1.15% -8.90% 446.67 451.82 451.82

Largest moves today

MERVAL 3,353,008 +6.34%

COLCAP 2,350.77 +3.90%

IPC MEX 66,977 +3.33%

IPSA 10,741 +2.75%

USD/COP 3,484 -2.09%

USD/BOB 6.86 +1.78%

IBOV 171,497 +1.71%

USD/UYU 40.67 +1.66%

The session read

The Ibovespa rose 1.71%, with breadth positive — 5 of 5 names higher. MERVAL led, while BVL PERÚ lagged.

03 Argentina soars — and Latin America leads the world

The single most dramatic move on the planet was in Argentina. Its banks jumped between 11% and 14% in one session — BBVA Argentina +14.33%, Supervielle +12.73%, Banco Macro +11.69% and Galicia +11.67% — far outpacing anything else in the global scan.

The driver is a long-awaited upgrade. Argentina is on the verge of being reclassified as an “emerging market,” a label change that would force big international funds to buy its shares and could pull in roughly $1 billion of new money.

That hope sits on top of real improvement. A record harvest and an energy boom have let Argentina’s central bank rebuild its dollar reserves, and its banks are now up more than 100% this year, so Thursday’s global tailwind lit an already-burning fire.

Argentina was the spark, but the whole region caught light. Mexico’s market rose +3.35%, Chile +4.60%, Colombia +5.48% and Brazil’s US-listed shares +3.05%, making Latin America the best-performing region in the world on the day.

04 The gaps that tell the story

Comparison Gap (points) What it means
Argentina BBVA (+14.33%) vs Brazil Petrobras (+0.72%) +13.61 Argentina’s upgrade story dwarfed even a strong regional day.
Korea KOSPI (+7.70%) vs Oil (−4.07%) +11.77 Chip-heavy Korea roared back while oil’s war premium drained away.
US chips SOXX (+8.39%) vs US energy XLE (−1.94%) +10.33 The exact reverse of last week — chips led, energy lagged.
US stocks (S&P +1.75%) vs Bitcoin (−0.26%) +2.01 A worldwide stock rally that crypto simply did not join.
Gold (+3.13%) and stocks both up rare Cooler inflation lifted shelters and shares together — an unusual combination.

The widest gap — Argentina’s banks up double-digits while a strong day elsewhere produced single-digit gains — shows how powerful a market-status upgrade can be. It is the kind of one-off event that can lift a whole country’s shares overnight.

The Korea-versus-oil gap captures the week’s full round trip. The same chip-heavy market that crashed last week led the rebound this week, while oil handed back the gains it had made on war fears.

05 The big picture: one scare ends, and the world exhales

The deeper story is how quickly a global mood can turn. Last week’s fear came from two places — a war risk that lifted oil, and an AI-chip scare that crashed Asia — and this week both eased at once.

A ceasefire took the war premium out of oil, and cooler inflation calmed the worry that prices were stuck too high. Together they let interest rates fall, which lifted almost every asset and pulled the riskiest corners, like chips and emerging markets, up the most.

For Latin America, the timing was perfect. The region trades on global confidence and commodity demand, so a worldwide risk-on day lands directly in its favor, and Argentina’s upgrade story gave it an extra, home-grown reason to lead.

The one note of caution is what did not join in. Crypto stalled while stocks soared, and a market that usually leads risk-on moves sitting one out can be an early hint that not everyone is convinced the all-clear has sounded.

06 What currencies are telling us

Currency Now Move In plain terms
Dollar vs Colombian peso 3,484 −2.09% Peso jumped — the standout currency winner as risk appetite returned.
Dollar vs Chilean peso 904 −1.04% Peso firmed as copper rose — a clean read on the risk-on mood.
Dollar vs Brazilian real 5.10 +0.09% Real broadly steady — Brazil’s gains showed up more in shares than the currency.
Dollar vs Mexican peso 17.25 +0.02% Peso steady even as Mexican stocks jumped — calm and firm.
Dollar vs Argentine peso 1,432 −0.03% Flat again — Argentina’s fireworks were in its stocks, not its currency.
Dollar vs Israeli shekel 2.94 +0.27% Shekel steady as Israeli shares jumped +5.56% on the ceasefire.

Currencies confirmed the upbeat mood, especially in the Andes. The Colombian peso was the day’s big winner, jumping more than 2%, with the Chilean peso close behind as copper rose, both classic signs of money flowing back into the region.

Argentina was the interesting exception. Its banks soared, yet the peso barely moved, a reminder that this week’s excitement is a story about its stock market and a possible upgrade rather than a sudden change in the currency.

07 Crypto and commodities — the clues after the stock market closes

What Now Move In plain terms
Bitcoin 63,394 −0.26% Flat while stocks soared — the rally’s most notable no-show.
Ethereum 1,666 −0.37% Slipped to a weekly low — the weakest major coin again.
Oil (US crude) 128.83 −4.07% Tumbled as the ceasefire drained the war premium — good news for inflation.
Gold 386.32 +3.13% Rose with everything else as interest rates fell on cooler inflation.
Copper 38.94 +3.23% Climbed on the risk-on mood — a boost for Chile and Peru’s miners.

The commodity scan showed the ceasefire working through the system. Oil fell sharply as the threat of a wider war receded, and that drop is itself part of why the rest of the world rallied, since cheaper oil means less inflation pressure.

Crypto was the puzzle. On a day when stocks jumped around the globe, Bitcoin went nowhere and Ethereum drifted to a weekly low, a quiet divergence that stands out precisely because crypto usually leads when investors feel bold.

08 What it means region by region

Brazil: Brazil joined the rally, with its US-listed shares up +3.05%, Nubank +4.04% and miner Vale +2.88% as global confidence returned. The one soft spot was Petrobras, up just +0.72% because falling oil works against it, while the local Bovespa index rose +1.71% and the real held steady near 5.10.

Mexico: Mexico rebounded strongly, with its main index up +3.35% and its US-listed fund +3.94%, recovering from the tariff worries that had weighed on it. The peso stayed steady at 17.25, a calm backdrop to the equity bounce.

Argentina: Argentina was the day’s global star, its banks leaping 11% to 14% on hopes of an emerging-market upgrade that could draw about $1 billion of new investment. The local Merval reading is unreliable on the data feed because of a glitch, and with the peso flat near 1,432, the excitement is squarely in the stock market.

Andes and beyond: Chile rose +4.60% and lithium producer SQM jumped +8.35%, Colombia gained +5.48% with bank Bancolombia +6.54%, and both currencies firmed as copper climbed. Further afield, the ceasefire lifted Israel’s market +5.56%, a reminder that the same good news powering Latin America started in the Middle East.

09 What to watch through the day

  • Latin American open: Watch whether Brazil and Mexico extend Thursday’s gains, and whether Argentina’s banks hold their huge jump or take profits after a double-digit day.
  • The Argentina upgrade: Any firm news on the emerging-market reclassification could drive the next leg, up or down, for Argentine shares.
  • Does the rally hold? The key question is whether the relief rally has staying power or fades, with the still-elevated fear gauge (19.44) hinting that nerves have not fully settled.
  • Oil and the ceasefire: Watch whether the truce holds and oil stays low, which keeps inflation pressure off the region, or whether tensions flare again.
  • The crypto tell: Watch whether Bitcoin and Ethereum finally join the rally or keep lagging, since their absence is the main caution flag on an otherwise upbeat day.

Frequently Asked Questions

What did global markets decide overnight, in one sentence?

A ceasefire in the Iran-Israel fighting and cooler-than-feared US inflation set off a worldwide relief rally — the S&P 500 rose +1.75%, the fear gauge crashed −12.51%, chips rebounded hard and the gains swept into Asia, where Korea’s KOSPI soared +7.70%. Latin America led the world, with Argentina’s banks up 11% to 14%, while oil fell −4.07% as the war premium drained away.

Why did almost everything rise on the same day?

Cooler inflation is the key: when price pressures ease, interest rates fall, and lower rates lift nearly every kind of asset at once — which is why stocks, bonds and gold all rose together. The ceasefire added to it by pulling the war premium out of oil, removing the inflation threat that had been scaring markets.

Which global signal matters most for Latin America today?

The return of global risk appetite is the big one, because Latin America’s commodity- and bank-heavy markets are among the first places money flows when confidence returns — the region led the world with gains around +3.8%. On top of that, Argentina’s possible upgrade to emerging-market status is a home-grown catalyst that could keep drawing money even if the global mood cools.

What is the one warning sign on an otherwise strong day?

Crypto did not join the rally — Bitcoin was flat and Ethereum slipped to a weekly low even as stocks soared worldwide. Since crypto often leads when investors are feeling bold, its absence is a quiet hint that some caution remains, and the still-elevated fear gauge at 19.44 says the same.

Connected Coverage

The Brazil Morning Call that picks up where this piece leaves off is filed daily on the Markets desk. Argentina’s upgrade story is tracked on our Argentina desk, the wider regional picture on our Latin America markets page, Mexico in the Mexico desk, and the global backdrop in the Market Reports hub.

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