Brazil

On June 12, 2025, the Colombian peso strengthened against the US dollar, with the USD/COP rate falling from 4,177 to a low near 4,143 before closing at 4,154.5.This move came amid a day of heightened volatility, as traders responded to both technical signals and a complex macroeconomic backdrop.
The 4-hour chart reveals that price action met the 200-period moving average early in the session.This level acted as a firm resistance wall, quickly reversing the dollars advance and triggering a sharp move lower.
The decline halted at the 50-period moving average, which then provided support and stopped further losses.By the close, the USD/COP rate was effectively trapped between these two major moving averages, reflecting market indecision.
Bollinger Bands narrowed, indicating reduced volatility, while the MACD turned negative and the RSI hovered near 49, confirming a neutral but cautious tone.On the daily chart, the pair remains below both the 50-day and 200-day moving averages, reinforcing the broader bearish trend for the dollar.
The MACD on the daily timeframe also stays negative, and the RSI at 47.97 signals a consolidating market rather than an oversold or overbought one.Colombian Peso Rallies but Faces Technical Barriers as Fiscal and Geopolitical Risks Loom.
(Photo Internet reproduction)Macroeconomic fundamentals continue to weigh on the outlook.
Colombias fiscal deficit remains elevated, with official projections for 2025 at 6% of GDP, one of the highest in decades.Colombian Peso Gains Amid Fiscal UncertaintyThe governments efforts to cut spending and increase revenues have yet to fully convince investors, especially after Congress rejected a proposed tax reform and forced austerity measures into the budget.The current account deficit is expected to widen as imports outpace exports, putting further pressure on the peso.
Geopolitical factors add another layer of uncertainty.The recent de-escalation of US-Colombia diplomatic tensions prevented immediate trade disruptions, but the episode highlighted the fragility of Colombias relationship with its largest trading partner.Global events, including ongoing sanctions on Russia and instability in the Middle East, have kept commodity prices, especially oil, relatively stable for now.
However, any renewed volatility in oil markets would quickly ripple through Colombias export revenues and currency.Despite these headwinds, Colombias central bank maintains interest rates above US levels, attracting some capital inflows and providing a floor for the peso.Still, analysts expect a gradual depreciation in the second half of the year as fiscal and external imbalances persist and the rate differential with the US narrows.In summary, the Colombian peso gained ground on June 12, but the technical charts show the market caught between major resistance and support levels.Macroeconomic and geopolitical risks remain elevated, suggesting that while the peso may consolidate in the near term, the broader outlook is still clouded by fiscal and external vulnerabilities.





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