Mexican peso hits 7-1/2 year high vs dollar, further gains eyed

Mexican peso hits 7-1/2 year high vs dollar, further gains eyed

A twenty pesos coin is seen, as Mexico’s Central Bank (Banco de Mexico) puts into circulation a twenty pesos coin which commemorates the 100th anniversary of the arrival of the Mennonites to the country, in this picture illustration taken August 9, 2022. REUTERS/Henry Romero/Illustration

MEXICO CITY, July 28 (Reuters) – Mexico’s peso on Friday hit its highest level against the dollar since early December 2015, as the greenback lost steam after a slowdown in U.S. inflation bolstered the case for the Federal Reserve to end its interest rate hikes.

The currency, which has been dubbed the “super peso” in some quarters, including by its most prominent cheerleader, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, strengthened by more than 1.3% in morning trading to 16.63 per dollar.

“What’s happening with the peso right now is due to weakness in the dollar, but also because of optimism surrounding the Mexican peso,” said Banco Base analyst Gabriela Siller.

“And with this international investors keep buying Mexican pesos and it may keep appreciating,” she added.

Data pointing to softening U.S. inflation on the one hand and better-than-expected growth data on the other has helped weaken the dollar and boost the peso, which could continue firming to 16.40 to the dollar, Siller said.

In a research note this week, JPMorgan analysts wrote that while the peso has been considered a “high-beta risk proxy currency for much of the past two decades, we think it is time investors shed this outdated perception.”

“The peso has entered a new chapter that will likely be accompanied by lower for longer volatility and a decoupling from the risk profile of its peer currencies in Latin America,” they forecast in the note called “MXN: Not your padre’s peso.”

Some analysts have warned that a prolonged peso run could eventually be more harmful than beneficial to Mexico’s economy because it makes Mexican exports more expensive and lowers the value of remittances sent back from the United States.