On August 13th, the Mexican Peso saw gains against the US Dollar following the release of lower-than-expected US Producer Price Index (PPI) data. The weakening of the US Dollar was sparked by the easing inflationary conditions in the US, which in turn increased expectations of an aggressive interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve (Fed) in September. The CME FedWatch tool showed an increase in the probability of a 0.50% cut by the Fed to 55.5% after the PPI data release.
The US Producer Price Index rose 0.1% in July on a month-over-month basis, meeting expectations but falling below the June figure of 0.2%. Year-over-year, it decreased to 2.2%, lower than the expected 2.3%. PPI excluding food and energy also fell short of forecasts, rising by 0.0% in July and 2.4% year-over-year. At the time of writing, one US Dollar buys 18.98 Mexican Pesos, EUR/MXN trades at 20.77, and GBP/MXN at 24.29.
However, the Mexican Peso had experienced a decline earlier due to weak consumer confidence data and comments made by the Bank of Mexico (Banxico) Governor, Victoria Rodríguez Ceja. The Mexican Consumer Confidence data for July showed a decline, with confidence dropping to 46.9 from the previous month’s five-year high of 47.5. Rodriguez Ceja’s comments supporting Banxico’s decision to cut interest rates by 0.25% at its August meeting also impacted the Peso negatively.
Technical analysis of USD/MXN suggests a corrective rebound after a protracted fall within a rising channel. The rebound is expected to stretch a final, third, “c” leg higher to complete an ABC correction, before continuing its decline to reach the lower channel line at around 18.30. A break below certain key levels would confirm a resumption of the downward trend in USD/MXN.
In conclusion, the Mexican Peso’s recent gains against the US Dollar have been driven by factors such as lower-than-expected US PPI data and increased expectations of a Fed interest rate cut. However, challenges such as weak consumer confidence data and Banxico’s interest rate decision have also impacted the Peso negatively. Technical analysis suggests a potential resumption of the Peso’s decline against the Dollar. Traders and investors will be closely monitoring economic indicators such as the Producer Price Index to gauge the future direction of the Mexican Peso.