Gloves Are Off In Mexico’s Battle Against Inflation – Can the ETF Win?

June 20th at 2:00pm by Tom Lydon

  • Bookmark and Share

Fighting Mexico is ready to throw down with inflation, which might turn its exchange traded fund (ETF) back around after negative one-month performance.

The country took two big steps to get control of the situation: first, they raised the benchmark short-term interest rate to 7.75%, from 7.5%. It’s the first increase since October, says Tom Petruno for the L.A. Times. Then, the country announced a deal with major food companies to freeze prices on more than 150 pantry staples through the end of the year.

The food-price freeze was supposed to forestall an interest rate hike, but Mexico apparently is extra-serious about fighting inflation. So far, the markets in Mexico like the moves, too: the peso is at five year highs against the dollar.

Will Mexico’s commitment to fighting inflation give the Federal Reserve a dash of inspiration? Right now, it’s between a rock and a hard place, because tighter credit could be a death sentence for the already-precarious situation of the financial companies.

The iShares MSCI Mexico (EWW) is up 3% year-to-date, but down 6.3% in the last month.

Z_8

Tickers

Subscribe to the ETF Trends Newsletter
Daily ETF News in your inbox
 
Your Email: 

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.