Implications For Banxico Policy
This higher-than-expected inflation print complicates the path for Banxico to begin cutting its policy rate. The market was anticipating a potential easing cycle to start mid-year, but this data point makes that less likely. We are now pricing in a more hawkish stance from the central bank for at least the next quarter. This environment reinforces the “super peso” narrative driven by the wide interest rate differential with the United States. We should look at derivative structures that benefit from a stable-to-stronger MXN, such as selling USD/MXN call options. Overnight interest rate swap markets now show expectations for the policy rate to remain above 10.5% through the third quarter, a notable shift from just last week. We remember how in late 2025, similar sticky core inflation readings caused Banxico to delay rate cuts, which ultimately squeezed shorts on the peso. History suggests that betting against the peso’s carry trade has been a losing proposition in this type of environment. The recent strength has already pushed the currency through its 50-day moving average, a key technical indicator. For the IPC stock index, however, this could signal trouble as higher borrowing costs may pressure corporate profits. This makes buying put options on major Mexican ETFs a reasonable hedge against long equity positions. Sectors sensitive to consumer credit could face the strongest headwinds, a trend we’ve seen in earnings reports over the last two quarters. Overall, the key takeaway is an increase in uncertainty surrounding the timing of any policy pivot from Banxico. We expect implied volatility on the MXN to rise in the coming weeks. This makes long volatility strategies, such as buying strangles on the currency pair, an attractive way to trade the potential for sharp moves around the next central bank meeting.Trading And Hedging Considerations
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