Stay informed with the latest insights on Mexico's economy via statistics, AI analysis, and synthesis.
Today's Lead:
Monetary Policy — Banxico Minutes: new observations
Inflation — CPI: new data and revisions (higher)
Monetary Policy — Market Expectations: new observations
Financing — Nonfinancial Lending: data revised lower
Financing — Volatility: data revised mixed
Inflation — Wage Dynamics: new observations

Updated: 2026-07-10
UBS has identified Banorte and BanBajío as its preferred banking institutions in Mexico. The selection is based on their strong performance and potential in the financial sector. UBS's endorsement highlights the growing confidence in these banks amid the evolving economic landscape in the country. — El Economista, 10 Jul 2026. Read more
The Mexican Stock Exchange (BMV) and the Institutional Stock Exchange (BIVA) recorded their lowest levels in the last month. This decline reflects ongoing market volatility and investor concerns. The article highlights the impact of various economic factors on the stock market performance. — El Economista, 10 Jul 2026. Read more
The Central Bank of Peru has decided to maintain its interest rate at 4.25% for the tenth consecutive month. This decision reflects the bank's ongoing strategy to manage economic conditions without making changes to the current rate. — El Economista, 10 Jul 2026. Read more
The article discusses the contrasting banking strategies of BBVA and Banco Azteca in Mexico. While BBVA has the highest number of ATMs, Banco Azteca leads in the number of branches. This highlights the differing approaches these banks take to serve their customers across the country. — Expansión, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
The article discusses how artificial intelligence has become a new focal point for inflation concerns, surpassing traditional factors like war and oil prices. The Federal Reserve, led by Jerome Powell, is now facing challenges in managing inflation due to the rapid advancements in AI technology. The implications of AI on economic stability and inflation rates are highlighted as critical issues for policymakers. — El Financiero, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
The Mexican peso closed stable against the dollar as the market remains vigilant regarding the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. Investors are closely monitoring the situation, which could impact economic conditions and exchange rates. The stability of the peso reflects cautious sentiment among traders amid geopolitical uncertainties. — El Economista, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
The Mexican peso is operating steadily against the dollar following the release of inflation data. The stability in the exchange rate comes amid ongoing economic assessments by Banxico, led by Governor Victoria Rodríguez Ceja. The market is closely monitoring these developments as they unfold. — El Economista, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
Inflation in Mexico decreased to 3.37% in June, attributed to a decline in prices of fruits and vegetables. This moderation reflects ongoing trends in the country's economic landscape. The report highlights the impact of food prices on overall inflation rates. — El Economista, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
The 'Súper Niño' weather phenomenon is expected to exert pressure on food inflation until 2027. Experts warn that this climatic event could disrupt agricultural production, leading to increased prices for food products. The implications of these changes are significant for both consumers and policymakers. — Expansión, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
The dollar has gained strength following the breakdown of the US-Iran peace agreement, leading to a depreciation of the Mexican peso. Analysts are closely monitoring the implications of this geopolitical shift on the Mexican economy and currency stability. — El Financiero, 08 Jul 2026. Read more
USD/MXN Analysis: Can the peso hold after Mexico’s inflation data? — Google News, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
Mexico Inflation Falls to 3.37%, Lowest Since 2020 — Google News, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
Mexico Inflation Eases More Than Expected In June, Bolstering Rate Cut Case — Google News, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
Trade between Switzerland and Mexico reaches US$4.2 billion — Google News, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
USMCA Review Offers Decade of Investment Certainty - AmCham — Google News, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
Mexico faces potential agricultural inflation — Google News, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
Banxico minutes show light easing of inflation risks from US-Iran talks — Google News, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
Mexico June core inflation undershoots, fuelling Banxico rate-cut bets and weighing on the peso — Google News, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
Mexico June Inflation Falls Sharply, Markets Price Banxico Rate Cut and Peso Weakness — Google News, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
Mexico’s inflation slows to lowest rate since 2020, easing pressure on central bank — Google News, 09 Jul 2026. Read more
Updated: 2026-06-27 by María López

Key Takeaways
Following the May 7, 2026 decision, Banxico's policy rate stands at 6.50%. After Banxico's May 7 meeting, the target rate remains at 6.50%, following a recent cut of 0.25%. The current policy stance has held steady since then, as the committee grapples with easing headline inflation but remains wary of global inflationary pressures and local economic uncertainties. This marks a pivotal moment in their strategy, as they weigh the need for stimulus against potential inflationary threats and structural weaknesses in the economy.
Relative to the United States, the Fed's target rate now sits at 3.62%, creating a significant rate differential of 2.88%. The Fed's target rate currently stands at 3.62%, reflecting a cautious stance similar to Banxico’s. With a rate differential of 2.88%, this gap creates implications for capital flows, as investors weigh potential returns against risks in both economies. Banxico’s decisions are increasingly influenced by the need to maintain economic stability amid domestic pressures, while the Fed continues its own trajectory of monetary policy adjustments.
The rate differential creates a complex landscape for capital flows and foreign exchange pressures.
The central bank's policy rate is the primary tool for steering inflation and economic activity. Banxico targets 3% annual inflation and adjusts its overnight interbank rate to influence borrowing costs throughout the economy. The rate differential with the United States affects capital flows and exchange rate dynamics — a wider spread can attract foreign investment but may constrain domestic credit. Policy decisions are announced roughly every six weeks following scheduled monetary policy meetings.
Updated: 2026-07-10 by María López

Key Takeaways
Banxico's minutes from the June 25 meeting show a neutral tone (composite score +0.0). Banxico's minutes from the June 25 meeting show a neutral tone (composite score +0.0). The committee's decision: Hold the policy rate steady.. Vote split: 5 hold.
The committee emphasizes the commitment to price stability. Forward guidance: The committee emphasizes the commitment to price stability. Future policy will be data-dependent, with a focus on inflation dynamics and external risks. Hawkish signals: Global inflation continues to rise due to energy prices.; Inflation expectations for the end of 2026 have been revised upwards in various countries.. Dovish signals: Recent negotiations have eased concerns about energy supply.; The US labor market risks have decreased, with stable job creation..
The tone is more hawkish compared with the prior 3 meetings. The tone is more hawkish compared with the prior 3 meetings. The latest composite score of +0.0 compares with a -0.3 average over the previous 3 meetings. The vote was unanimous, with no recorded dissent.
Each Banxico monetary policy meeting's published minutes are analyzed by a large language model, which scores the committee's overall tone on a composite scale from -2 (very dovish) to +2 (very hawkish) and extracts the vote split, forward guidance, and hawkish/dovish signals. Minutes are typically published by Banxico about two weeks after the corresponding policy decision, so this analysis always lags the live decision by that margin. The commentary on this page is assembled directly from those stored, structured fields rather than generated by a separate LLM call.
Updated: 2026-07-10 by María López

Key Takeaways
With updated insights from inflation and economic stability indicators, the model points toward likely inaction at Banxico's next meeting on February 5, 2026, suggesting a substantial chance of no action with a hold probability of about 58%. The model indicates a current expected move of -11bp, showing a material swing since our last update. The modal bucket now sits squarely at ±0bp, with a notable 38.9% probability of a -25bp cut also in play. This environment reflects a cautious stance, as mixed signals surrounding inflation and broader economic conditions keep the committee on its toes.
Recent data updates have brought fresh insights into key economic drivers, particularly inflation and external pressures. Inflation ticked higher, while economic growth indicators remain volatile, keeping the data landscape current but challenging. The persistent concerns over external inflationary pressures, especially from the U.S. monetary stance, continue to cloud the outlook.
Looking at the drivers, inflation remains a significant concern, exerting moderate hawkish pressure on policy decisions. The rise in inflation, coupled with the ongoing economic policy uncertainty, is creating a slight dovish pull, complicating Banxico's decision-making process. Meanwhile, influences from the exchange rate and bond yields are economically negligible at this juncture. It's crucial to remember that the actual decision will ultimately rely on the committee's judgment, transcending just the model's mechanical outputs.
Ordered Probit Probabilities
| Rate Change | 04 Feb | 05 Feb 2026 | Δ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cut | 58.4% | 42.0% | -16.4 |
| Hold | 41.6% | 58.0% | +16.4 |
| Hike | 0.0% | 0.0% | +0.0 |
| E[Δrate] | -17.5 bp | -11.3 bp | +6.2 bp |
Probabilities in %. Modal bin in bold. E[Δrate] = probability-weighted expected change in basis points.
When markets and the public can anticipate how and why the central bank acts, uncertainty falls and policy becomes more effective. Clear communication helps businesses plan investments, households make borrowing decisions, and international investors gauge currency risks. Economists often stress the importance of clarity and traceability — the ability to follow and understand decisions step by step. Without it, rate moves risk being misread, causing volatility instead of stability. With it, policy signals are more credible, anchoring expectations and strengthening the central bank's influence.
Rate-change probabilities are estimated using an ordered probit model with eight macroeconomic and financial drivers: consumer price inflation (CPI), consumer confidence, the 30-day peso/dollar change, the CETES 28-day spread, stock market growth, the yield curve slope (10Y minus 2Y), Mexico's Economic Policy Uncertainty index, and the Fed-Banxico rate differential. The model maps these drivers into probability bins for the next monetary policy decision, ranging from cuts of 50 basis points or more to hikes of the same magnitude. Coefficients are estimated on the historical record of Banxico decisions and their pre-decision data environment. Probabilities update daily as driver series refresh and should be treated as one input among many.
Out-of-sample backtest across 24 past meetings: the modal prediction matched the actual decision 46% of the time, directional accuracy (hike/hold/cut) was 67%, Brier score 0.720. Out-of-sample backtest across 24 past meetings: the modal prediction matched the actual decision 46% of the time, directional accuracy (hike/hold/cut) was 67%, Brier score 0.720. Lower Brier scores indicate better-calibrated probability forecasts.
Updated: 2026-07-06 by María López

Key Takeaways
The DOF carried 13 economically relevant publications in the week ending July 06, 2026. The DOF carried 13 economically relevant publications in the week ending July 06, 2026. By category: financial_regulation (7), tax (5), trade (3), energy (1). The weekly maximum severity reached 3/5.
Recent notable publications include:. July 06 — SECRETARIA DE HACIENDA Y CREDITO PUBLICO: Resolución que modifica las Disposiciones de carácter general aplicables a las casas de bolsa. (severity 3/5). July 03 — SECRETARIA DE HACIENDA Y CREDITO PUBLICO: Oficio 500-05-00-00-00-2026-16022 mediante el cual se comunica listado de contribuyentes que promovieron algún medio de defensa en contra d… (severity 3/5). July 03 — SECRETARIA DE HACIENDA Y CREDITO PUBLICO: Acuerdo por el cual se dan a conocer los montos de los estímulos fiscales aplicables a la enajenación de gasolinas en la región fronteriza… (severity 3/5).
CONAMER (the Comisión Nacional de Mejora Regulatoria), which previously required draft regulations to be pre-published for public consultation before taking effect, was extinguished by a reform enacted in June 2025. With that pre-publication consultation step gone, the Diario Oficial de la Federación is now the earliest official signal available for new regulations, decrees, and reforms — there is no longer an upstream draft-stage checkpoint to monitor instead.
This monitor scans the DOF's daily sumario (official gazette summary) for publication titles and issuing organisms, then applies a keyword classifier — not an LLM — to flag economically relevant entries across six categories (tax, trade, labor, energy, financial regulation, judicial) and assign a severity score from 1 (routine) to 5 (major fiscal/labor policy change, e.g. Miscelánea Fiscal or a minimum-wage decree). Only sumario titles and issuing organisms are scanned in this MVP; full document text is not retrieved or analyzed.
So…what is this—and why am I doing it?
This project began with a simple question in 2021: how much of the work of producing useful economic information can we hand over to machines? Monitoring Monetary Policy in Mexico is a thought experiment at that frontier. By combining statistical analysis, tailored visualizations, and large language models, it demonstrates how even highly specialized topics—such as Mexican monetary policy—can be made more accessible, relevant, and insightful. Meanwhile, the system is designed to run without human intervention on a daily basis. My role is to set the design; the automation carries it out.
When does data stop being a dump and start being a story?
The initiative builds on my earlier Monitoring Mexico project but has since evolved in important ways. Data is no longer simply displayed; it is analyzed, distilled, forecasted, visualized, interpreted, narrated, and contextualized. Large language models help transform both raw and modeled data into context, turning numbers into stories. In short, raw information is transformed into understanding.
Who’s in charge here—a Raspberry Pi or common sense?
Behind the scenes, the site runs on a Raspberry Pi 5 powered by Python and a library of custom routines. Automation drives much of the process, but human expertise remains essential in designing the explanation and presenting the material. The balance between machine efficiency and human judgment is what makes the project work.
How do we cut through the jargon and keep the signal?
The aim is straightforward: to bring clarity to an area often obscured by technical detail. Monetary policy shapes households, firms, and markets, yet its analysis usually remains confined to experts. By filtering, explaining, and visualizing the data, this project seeks to make that knowledge more transparent and more useful.
Is this the 80/20 rule you learn in business school in the wild?
At its core, the site is both a contribution to public understanding and an exploration of how informational value is created. It is a humble attempt to deliver 80% of the insights of a central bank analysis with 20% of the resources—while also testing what the future of knowledge generation might look like.
What might be new the next time you drop by?
This is very much a work in progress, with new features, analyses, and visualizations added over time. We can now at the brink of generating our very own economic policy uncertainty (EPU) index, and we consider a newsletter. But maybe a chatbot might be more appropriate? Coming back to check for updates is always a good idea. If the site sparks curiosity, fosters dialogue, or simply helps illuminate Mexico’s economic dynamics, it has achieved its goal.
Updated: 2026-07-10 by María López

Key Takeaways
The mid-June 2026 CPI release shows headline inflation at 3.37%, firmly within Banxico's 2%-4% target band. The mid-June 2026 CPI release shows headline inflation at 3.37%, around the 21st percentile. This marks a decrease of 0.18 from the previous observation, continuing its seven-month downward streak. While the current rate is manageable, the trajectory suggests that the downward momentum is slowing, which could raise eyebrows at Banxico as they grapple with the implications for monetary policy.
Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, stands at 4.06%, signaling underlying inflation pressures that diverge from the headline figure. Core inflation, which excludes volatile components, is at 4.06%, around the 65th percentile. It has dipped by 0.12 since the last release, indicating that while core inflation is decreasing, it remains above the 3% target. This divergence raises concerns for policymakers, as persistent core inflation could compel Banxico to adopt a more aggressive stance to rein in expectations.
Trade prices reflect significant shifts, with export prices surging to 15.90%, raising alarms about global market influences. Trade prices saw export price inflation soar to 15.90%, which is in the 95th percentile historically. This sharp increase underscores the external pressures Mexican producers face, complicating an already tricky inflation landscape. With import prices not far behind at 5.46%, the interconnectedness of domestic and global market conditions remains a critical concern for economic stability.
| 2H Jun 2026 | 2H Jun 2027 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Series | Current | Prev. Fcast | Error | 12M Fcast | Prev. 12M | Rev. |
| Headline CPI | 3.4 | — | — | 5.0 | 5.0 | +0.00 |
| Core CPI | 4.1 | — | — | 4.6 | 4.6 | +0.00 |
| Export Price Index | — | — | — | 7.2 | 7.2 | +0.00 |
| Import Price Index | — | — | — | 6.7 | 6.7 | +0.00 |
All values in percentage points (YoY, seasonally adjusted). "Error" = actual minus previous forecast. "Revision" = change in 12-month outlook since last update. "—" = no prior forecast available.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) measures changes in the cost of a representative basket of goods and services purchased by Mexican households. Banxico targets 3% annual inflation with a tolerance band of 2%-4%. Core CPI — which excludes volatile food and energy prices — reveals underlying inflation trends that guide monetary policy. Import and export price indices extend the picture by linking Mexico's inflation dynamics to global markets, trade flows, and currency movements.
Headline CPI, core CPI, export prices, and import prices are projected six months ahead using a Vector Autoregression (VAR). The four series are estimated jointly, so each informs the others' forecasts through lagged interactions. Projections update each time new CPI data arrive and may shift materially after revisions.
Out-of-sample backtest over 70 evaluation windows using the Vector Autoregression (VAR). Out-of-sample backtest over 70 evaluation windows using the Vector Autoregression (VAR). RMSE measures the typical forecast error in the same units as the series; 'naive' is a no-change benchmark. Headline CPI (RMSE 1.08 vs 1.03 naive, n=70); Core CPI (RMSE 0.65 vs 1.06 naive, +39% improvement, n=70); Export Price Inflation (RMSE 7.27 vs 7.77 naive, +6% improvement, n=56); Import Price Inflation (RMSE 2.99 vs 2.05 naive, n=56).
Updated: 2026-06-26 by Alexander Dentler

Key Takeaways
The recent update from the SHF House Price Index reveals significant insights into the state of the housing market, particularly with the new observation of 8.71% YoY inflation as of 2026-01-01. This level of house price inflation exceeds historical averages, positioning itself in the 75th percentile since 2006. In comparison, headline CPI inflation stands at 3.94% while housing CPI inflation is at 3.61%, suggesting that house prices are rising notably faster than general inflation metrics. This divergence reflects the ongoing demand pressures in the housing sector, despite a slight decline of 0.21 percentage points from the previous quarter.
The DFM nowcast provides valuable context, estimating house price inflation at 8.65% YoY as of 2026-05-01. This nowcast aligns closely with the latest observed value, indicating that auxiliary indicators such as mortgage lending and housing CPI are confirming the current trajectory rather than suggesting any significant upward or downward pressure. The model's consistency with observed data suggests that the dynamics within the housing market remain robust and supportive of sustained inflationary trends.
DFM Nowcast Comparison
| Observed | Nowcast | Prev. Nowcast | Gap | Revision | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SHF House Price Inflation (YoY) | 8.71% | 8.65% | 8.65% | -0.06 | +0.00 |
Observed: 2026-Q1. Nowcast: 2026-05. Previous nowcast: 2026-05. "Gap" = nowcast − observed. "Revision" = change in nowcast since previous run.
The SHF House Price Index is published quarterly by Sociedad Hipotecaria Federal, Mexico's federal mortgage development bank, typically around 40 days after the reference quarter ends. It is constructed from mortgage appraisal data (avalúos) using a Case-Shiller repeat-sales methodology, with breakdowns by state, new vs. used housing, and market segment (affordable vs. mid-to-high-end). Because the index reflects prices at the point of mortgage origination, it captures credit-driven demand rather than asking prices, making it a tighter gauge of actual transaction values and collateral quality across the housing market.
A Dynamic Factor Model (DFM) filters the quarterly SHF House Price Index using five Banxico auxiliary series — the funding rate, mortgage lending volumes, a housing purchase survey indicator, the SPF unemployment forecast, and construction activity — plus two CPI components (headline and housing subcategory). The model extracts a common factor from these seven indicators, producing a smoothed nowcast that updates between quarterly SHF releases whenever auxiliary data arrive. This filtered estimate helps distinguish persistent trends from quarterly noise in the observed house price series.
Out-of-sample backtest over 12 evaluation windows using the Dynamic Factor Model (DFM). Out-of-sample backtest over 12 evaluation windows using the Dynamic Factor Model (DFM). RMSE measures the typical forecast error in the same units as the series; 'naive' is a no-change benchmark. House Price Nowcast (RMSE 1.32 vs 0.66 naive, n=12).
Updated: 2026-06-06 by María López

Key Takeaways
Brent oil prices just jumped to $106.30 as of May 2026, reflecting a staggering YoY increase of 65.8%. Brent oil prices through May 2026 show a notable rise, landing at $106.30. This marks a significant YoY change of +65.8%, and the momentum is clearly up, with prices climbing in recent days. For Mexico, where oil is a major export and accounts for about 15% of federal revenue, these figures are crucial — they could bolster government finances and Pemex operations.
Copper prices are hitting $13,483.75, up 41.5% YoY as of May 2026. With copper data updated to May 2026, the current price stands at $13,483.75, showcasing a robust YoY increase of 41.5%. The trend remains upward, indicating strong demand in the global market. Given that Sonora dominates copper production in Mexico, this surge could enhance regional economic activity, despite the sector's small employment footprint.
Corn prices are at $215.62, reflecting a modest YoY increase of 5.3%. As of May 2026, corn prices reached $215.62, showing a slight YoY rise of 5.3%. The trend appears stable, neither soaring nor plummeting significantly. This is particularly relevant for Mexico, where corn is a staple for many, and price stability is key for the 1.5 million smallholder farmers dependent on this crop.
Commodity prices feed directly into Mexico's inflation pulse and terms of trade. Oil and corn affect energy and food costs, while copper is a proxy for global industrial demand. For policymakers, sharp commodity swings can shift inflation expectations and fiscal balances, making these prices critical to monitor.
Updated: 2026-07-10 by María López

Key Takeaways
The June 2026 IMSS release shows unit labor costs at 3.34%, signaling that wages are outpacing productivity in the manufacturing sector. Following June's formal sector wage data, ULC in manufacturing has shifted upward, indicating that wages are growing faster than productivity. This trend raises concerns about potential cost-push inflation, as companies may struggle to maintain competitiveness amidst increasing labor costs. The current trajectory suggests a tightening squeeze on margins, with implications for pricing strategies across the sector.
Real wages in the formal sector are on a positive trajectory, with manufacturing real wages at 3.12%, showing that purchasing power is indeed growing for workers. Purchasing power among formal workers remains robust, particularly in manufacturing where real wage growth continues to support household finances. Although there has been a year-over-year decline of 3.83%, the current level indicates a strong position relative to historical data. This positive trend is crucial as it can stimulate demand and bolster overall economic activity moving forward.
Across sectors, a significant divergence is evident, particularly in unit labor costs, where manufacturing is seeing a rise while retail grapples with a decline at -1.01%. Manufacturing and retail diverge sharply, with manufacturing benefiting from stronger wage growth while retail struggles with negative labor cost dynamics. This gap underscores the need for strategic shifts in retail operations to remain competitive. The contrasting performances in these sectors could influence broader economic trends, impacting consumer behavior and investment strategies.
SARIMAX Forecast Comparison
| Series | Current | Prev. Forecast | Error | 12M Forecast | Prev. 12M | Revision |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ULC Manufacturing | — | — | — | 0.3 | 0.3 | +0.00 |
| ULC Retail | — | — | — | 1.7 | 1.7 | +0.00 |
| Real Wage Mfg | — | — | — | 3.0 | 3.0 | +0.00 |
| Real Wage Retail | — | — | — | 4.4 | 4.4 | +0.00 |
All values in % (MoM, seasonally adjusted). "Error" = actual − previous forecast. "Revision" = change in 12-month outlook. "—" = no prior forecast available.
Unit labor costs (ULC) measure the average cost of labor per unit of output — when wages grow faster than productivity, ULC rises, potentially squeezing profit margins and fueling inflation. In Mexico, where the formal sector employs roughly half the workforce, IMSS-registered wage data captures trends in the formal economy but misses the informal sector's dynamics. Real wages — nominal wages adjusted for inflation — determine household purchasing power and underpin consumer demand. For policymakers, these indicators help balance inflation control, competitiveness, and the economic welfare of Mexican workers.
Twelve-month-ahead forecasts for unit labor costs and real wages in manufacturing and retail are produced using a Seasonal Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average with eXogenous inputs (SARIMAX) model. The model is estimated on seasonally adjusted month-over-month percentage changes, with all four series — ULC manufacturing, ULC retail, real wage manufacturing, and real wage retail — entering as joint endogenous variables. No external auxiliary data feed the forecast; the model relies solely on the internal dynamics and cross-series interactions of the wage and productivity data. Forecast confidence intervals widen over the projection horizon.
Out-of-sample backtest over 24 evaluation windows using the SARIMAX. Out-of-sample backtest over 24 evaluation windows using the SARIMAX. RMSE measures the typical forecast error in the same units as the series; 'naive' is a no-change benchmark. ULC Manufacturing (RMSE 2.97 vs 3.21 naive, +7% improvement, n=24); ULC Retail (RMSE 5.33 vs 5.22 naive, n=23); Real Wage Manufacturing (RMSE 2.20 vs 2.62 naive, +16% improvement, n=24); Real Wage Retail (RMSE 3.05 vs 2.97 naive, n=23).
Updated: 2026-06-19 by Pablo Rivas

Key Takeaways
Following the recent updates in key economic indicators, real GDP growth in Mexico is now estimated at 4.96%, reflecting a robust upward revision of 2.66%. The latest quarterly GDP release from INEGI shows a marked increase in growth expectations, signaling a healthier economic outlook. This adjustment highlights a strong recovery trajectory, likely driven by resilient domestic consumption and improved industrial performance. As we advance into Q1 2026, this optimistic figure may bolster confidence among investors and policymakers alike.
Private consumption continues to be a key driver of growth. Household spending is estimated to have soared to 8.09%, significantly outpacing GDP growth. This robust expansion suggests that consumers are confident and willing to spend, providing essential support to overall economic activity. Such vigor in private consumption is a positive sign, signaling a thriving domestic market that can help buffer against external shocks.
Exports are struggling to keep up with domestic demand. External demand remains tepid, with export growth now at a mere 0.58%. This lackluster performance raises concerns about Mexico's competitiveness in the global market, especially as trading partners navigate their own economic uncertainties. The soft export figures could hint at challenges ahead for sectors reliant on international trade, potentially dampening the overall growth outlook.
Imports are indicating a shift in domestic absorption patterns. Imports have contracted to 1.56%, reflecting a 3.81% decline from previous estimates. This downturn signals a potential cooling in domestic demand, as consumers and businesses may be becoming more cautious in their spending habits. The drop in imports could also suggest that the economy is adjusting to current market conditions, though it may raise questions about future growth sustainability.
Net trade dynamics appear to be shifting. The trade balance contribution remains a mixed bag, as the decline in imports coupled with stagnant export growth presents a complex scenario. While fewer imports can ease some pressure on the trade deficit, the sluggish export performance raises flags about Mexico's economic resilience in a challenging global landscape. Policymakers will need to monitor these trends closely to ensure balanced and sustainable growth.
DFM GDP Nowcasts
| Component | Last Obs. (Q1 2026) | Nowcast (Q1 2026) | Prev. Nowcast | Revision |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Real Gross Domestic Product | 6.19% | 4.96% | 4.96% | +0.00 |
| Private Consumption | 0.15% | 8.09% | 8.09% | +0.00 |
| Imports | 25.37% | 1.56% | 1.56% | +0.00 |
| Exports | 0.58% | 0.58% | 0.58% | +0.00 |
QoQ annualized, seasonally adjusted. Nowcast = DFM filtered estimate using higher-frequency inputs. "Revision" = change from previous run.
Real activity data tracks the economy's engine — output, spending, and trade — while nowcasts bridge the lag between releases. Real GDP captures total production; private consumption reflects household demand; exports and imports reveal external demand and the flow of inputs for Mexico's trade-exposed, manufacturing-heavy economy. Shifts in U.S. demand, global prices, and the peso often show up first in trade, then filter into GDP and consumption. Because official series arrive with delays and revisions, model-based nowcasts provide an early, probabilistic read for policy timing — useful if treated with uncertainty bands and cross-checked against higher-frequency signals.
A Dynamic Factor Model (DFM) nowcasts quarterly GDP and its demand components — private consumption, imports, and exports — using 14 higher-frequency inputs. These include monthly employment indicators, industrial production (IGAE), consumer confidence, capacity utilization, retail sales, and private consumption, plus quarterly GDP sector breakdowns. The model extracts common factors via the Kalman filter, updating the nowcast each time any input series receives new data. Nowcast estimates are conditional expectations that narrow as more data arrive within each quarter.
Out-of-sample backtest over 12 evaluation windows using the Dynamic Factor Model (DFM). Out-of-sample backtest over 12 evaluation windows using the Dynamic Factor Model (DFM). RMSE measures the typical forecast error in the same units as the series; 'naive' is a no-change benchmark. Real GDP (RMSE 3.90 vs 3.82 naive, n=12); Private Consumption (RMSE 5.41 vs 2.51 naive, n=12); Exports (RMSE 22.26 vs 18.28 naive, n=12); Imports (RMSE 11.34 vs 17.09 naive, +34% improvement, n=12).
Updated: 2026-07-03 by Alexander Dentler

Key Takeaways
The latest ENOE survey for January 2026 reveals a notable resilience in the Mexican labor market as the unemployment rate remains at 2.51%, reflecting a low percentile historically. The January 2026 ENOE survey shows unemployment at 2.51%, which is around the 1st percentile of its historical range. This figure represents a decline of -0.0158% compared to December 2025, continuing a downward trend observed over the past year, where it has decreased by -0.22%. Such persistently low unemployment rates might suggest a tightening labor market, which could have implications for wage pressures and consumer spending.
By gender, the unemployment landscape presents a nuanced picture, with male unemployment at 3.35%, significantly higher than female unemployment at 3.51%. Male and female unemployment rates show a divergence, with males registering at 3.35%—around the 86th percentile—while females are at 3.51%, around the 14th percentile. This disparity highlights the ongoing challenges faced by male workers in securing employment relative to their female counterparts, suggesting potential sectoral or demographic influences at play.
The share of informal workers remains elevated, signaling persistent structural issues in the labor market. Informal employment in January 2026 stands at 55.7%, which is around the 96th percentile of its historical range. This marks an increase of 0.132% from the previous month, indicating a rising trend in informality. The prevalence of informal employment often points to underlying economic vulnerabilities and may complicate efforts to achieve sustainable growth and improve job quality.
DFM Employment Nowcasts
| Indicator | Last Obs. (Q2 2026) | Nowcast (Q2 2026) | Prev. Nowcast | Revision |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unemployment Rate | 2.56% | 2.51% | — | — |
| Underemployment Rate | 10.28% | 12.17% | — | — |
| Male Unemployment | 2.45% | 3.35% | — | — |
| Female Unemployment | 2.71% | 3.51% | — | — |
Observed = latest quarterly ENOE value. Nowcast = DFM filtered estimate using monthly auxiliary data. "Revision" = change from previous run.
Labor slack and its composition shape inflation pressure, policy timing, and social risk. Unemployment, underemployment, and unemployment by gender reveal how broad and uneven slack is. In Mexico's large informal sector, the informal employment share can swing sharply — often contracting faster in downturns as unprotected jobs are cut first, then rebounding early — masking true slack if headline unemployment alone is tracked. Tracking these dimensions helps distinguish cyclical slack from structural mismatches and calibrate monetary policy accordingly.
Between quarterly ENOE survey releases, a Dynamic Factor Model (DFM) nowcasts employment indicators using higher-frequency auxiliary data. The model ingests monthly series — industrial production, consumer confidence, capacity utilization, retail sales, and private consumption — alongside quarterly GDP components to extract common factors that track the business cycle. When any auxiliary series receives new data, the Kalman filter updates the nowcast, providing an early signal before the next official employment release.
Out-of-sample backtest over 20 evaluation windows using the Dynamic Factor Model (DFM). Out-of-sample backtest over 20 evaluation windows using the Dynamic Factor Model (DFM). RMSE measures the typical forecast error in the same units as the series; 'naive' is a no-change benchmark. Unemployment (RMSE 22.27 vs 0.13 naive, n=17); Underemployment (RMSE 1.26 vs 0.50 naive, n=11); Male Unemployment (RMSE 0.44 vs 0.26 naive, n=11); Female Unemployment (RMSE 0.44 vs 0.28 naive, n=11).
Updated: 2026-06-12 by María López

Key Takeaways
INEGI's Q2 2026 productivity release shows secondary sector output at 102, reflecting a solid 2.13% increase from the previous month. The latest INEGI productivity data for Q2 2026, released on June 12, reveals that secondary sector output is holding strong, driven by notable gains in construction and manufacturing. This growth is broad-based, with the construction sector leading the charge, signaling resilience against inflationary pressures. Meanwhile, mining lags behind, indicating potential instability in that subsector.
Manufacturing composites show a mixed bag of trends, highlighting sustainability concerns. Across the PCA indices, productivity dipped slightly while sales and inventory dynamics suggest a tightening labor market. The divergence in labor demand—currently at a low of -1.49—raises red flags about future growth potential, especially as rising inventory levels could indicate overproduction risks.
Within manufacturing, construction shines while the chemical industry struggles. The top-performing subsectors include construction, which is at the 99th percentile, showing a whopping 7.76% increase, while the chemical industry underperforms in the 21st percentile, down 7.74%. The robust construction output significantly bolsters the overall manufacturing index, but the decline in chemicals underscores the volatility and challenges facing specific industries.
PCA Composite Indices
| Index | May 2025 | Jun 2025 | Δ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Productivity Index | 0.50 | 0.28 | -0.22 |
| Sales Index | 0.58 | 0.61 | +0.03 |
| Inventory Index | 0.15 | -0.03 | -0.18 |
| Labor Demand Index | -1.32 | -1.49 | -0.17 |
Standardized scores (0 = mean, ±1 = one standard deviation).
Productivity trends reveal the economy's capacity to grow without stoking inflation. In Mexico, productivity in the secondary sector — mining, energy, construction, and especially manufacturing — signals how efficiently output expands relative to inputs. Strong productivity gains mean firms can meet demand without raising prices, easing inflation pressure and supporting sustainable wage growth. Weak productivity, by contrast, constrains supply, making cost shocks more inflationary. Manufacturing deserves closer scrutiny, as its diverse subsectors respond differently to global demand, exchange rate shifts, and investment cycles. Tracking these patterns helps judge whether growth is supported by efficiency gains or reliant on credit and labor cost increases.
Four composite indices — productivity, sales, inventory, and labor demand — are constructed using Principal Component Analysis (PCA) applied to INEGI manufacturing subsector data and GDP sector composition. PCA extracts the dominant co-movement pattern across subsectors, producing standardized indices that summarize broad trends while filtering out subsector-specific noise. The productivity index draws on output-per-worker measures across manufacturing branches; the sales, inventory, and labor demand indices use INEGI's corresponding survey-based indicators supplemented by GDP sector weights.
Updated: 2026-07-03 by Alexander Dentler

The June 2026 consumer confidence survey shows the general index at 1.12, reflecting elevated sentiment at the 85th percentile. INEGI's latest June 2026 release reveals confidence at 1.12, reflecting elevated sentiment at the 85th percentile. This index rose by 0.11 compared to May, indicating a positive shift in consumer attitudes. However, the durable goods index at 1.72 suggests particularly strong confidence in this area, contrasting with the housing-specific index, which has dropped to 0.10. This divergence may reflect consumers' prioritization of immediate purchases over long-term investments amid ongoing economic uncertainties.
PCA Confidence Indices
| Index | May 2026 | Jun 2026 | Δ |
|---|---|---|---|
| General Sentiment | 1.01 | 1.12 | +0.11 |
| Housing Appetite | 0.34 | 0.10 | -0.24 |
| Durables Appetite | 1.29 | 1.72 | +0.43 |
Values are z-scores (0 = historical mean, ±1 = one standard deviation).
The ENCO (Encuesta Nacional sobre Confianza del Consumidor) is conducted jointly by INEGI and Banco de México. Roughly 2,300 households across 32 major cities are interviewed during the first 20 days of each reference month, and results are published around the 5th of the following month. The survey uses a rotating panel design — each household stays in sample for four consecutive months, rests for eight, then returns for four more — which smooths out idiosyncratic response noise while capturing genuine shifts in sentiment. Because confidence data arrive before most hard activity indicators for the same month, they provide an early read on whether household demand is strengthening or cooling.
Three composite confidence indices — general sentiment, housing appetite, and durables appetite — are extracted from the eight raw INEGI survey questions using Principal Component Analysis (PCA). PCA identifies the common variation within each question group, producing a single index that captures the dominant signal while filtering out question-specific noise. The general index draws on six broad economic outlook questions; the housing and durables indices each isolate spending appetite in categories most sensitive to interest rates and household balance sheets.
Updated: 2026-07-04 · News-based EPU indices (complete months)

Key Takeaways
Overall uncertainty at a multi-month low. Mexico's news-based Economic Policy Uncertainty index fell to 19.3 in June 2026, its lowest reading in months and the fourth straight monthly decline from 21.9 in March (20.0 in April, 19.8 in May). The index measures the share of Mexican news coverage discussing economic-policy uncertainty, so the drift lower signals a calmer policy-news environment through the second quarter.
Sovereign-debt and currency concern is doing most of the cooling. The sovereign-debt/currency sub-index fell to 16.1 from 21.9 in March — the single largest contributor to the overall decline. Fiscal-policy uncertainty also eased to 7.1 (from 8.4 in March), and trade-policy uncertainty stayed subdued at 7.6. Monetary-policy uncertainty was the one sub-index to tick up in June, to 14.5 after bottoming at 13.2 in May, consistent with renewed attention on the rate path.
What to watch. These are complete-month figures; the current partial month is excluded until it closes. A sustained rebound in the monetary or trade sub-indices would be the first sign the Q2 downtrend is turning.
Updated: 2026-07-02 by Alexander Dentler

Key Takeaways
The June 2026 SPF survey reveals a modest decline in economic concerns. The June 2026 SPF survey shows the aggregate Concern Index at 2.83, placing it around the 63rd percentile. This marks a decrease of -0.13 from the previous month, suggesting a slight easing in overall economic anxieties. Nonetheless, the index has experienced a downward trend over the past two months, indicating persistent underlying concerns among economic observers.
The latest survey highlights significant constraints on growth, particularly in public security and trade policy. Economists have identified public insecurity as the top constraint, currently accounting for 9.2% of concerns, followed closely by US trade policy at 8.2%. Notably, public insecurity has decreased by -0.46 from the previous month, while US trade policy has seen a substantial increase of +1.80, underscoring its growing impact on economic sentiment.
Recession concerns remain moderate, reflecting a cautious outlook among economists. The perceived probability of recession stands at 10.0%, which is moderate compared to historical norms. This indicates a stable sentiment among surveyed economists when juxtaposed with the previous quarter, suggesting that while fears exist, they are not at alarming levels. The outlook for the next quarter is slightly more pronounced at 15.0%, indicating a potential uptick in recession fears.
Expectations regarding the peso's valuation indicate a prevailing sense of overvaluation among forecasters. According to forecasters, the current FX forecast misalignment reflects a perceived overvaluation of the peso, with a deviation of +0.058. This sentiment is consistent across multiple horizons, as forecasters anticipate a similar pattern in the following months, suggesting a sustained outlook of a weaker peso than expected.
Banxico's Survey of Professional Forecasters (Encuesta sobre las Expectativas de los Especialistas en Economía del Sector Privado) polls roughly 40 groups of analysts from banks, financial institutions, consultancies, and research centers. Responses are collected during the second half of each reference month — typically between the 15th and 28th — and results are published on the first business day of the following month. Because respondents form their expectations before some end-of-month official data releases, the survey provides an early window into shifting professional sentiment on inflation, growth constraints, recession risk, and exchange rates, making it a valuable leading indicator for policymakers and market participants.
Updated: 2026-07-10 by María López

Key Takeaways
Bond prices as of 2026-07-10 show the 10Y-3Y spread at 1.22%, indicating a slight softening in nominal spreads and highlighting ongoing economic uncertainty. The latest yield curve data reveals the nominal 10Y-3Y spread at 1.22%, down 0.17% from the previous observation, while the real spread sits at 0.53%, reflecting a 0.09% increase. Despite the nominal spread's decline, the real spread's uptick signals that market participants are still wrestling with inflation expectations. The breakeven inflation spread, currently at 0.70%, suggests that investors expect inflation to remain a concern, but not at alarming levels, hinting at a cautious optimism in the economic outlook.
The curve shape suggests a potential hold from Banxico, aligning with current market expectations. Markets appear to be pricing in a likely hold from Banxico at their next meeting, which reflects a 75% probability of no change in the policy rate. This positioning aligns closely with the yield curve's current state, indicating that while there are inflationary pressures, the committee's cautious approach is consistent with maintaining stability amidst mixed economic signals.
Yield Spread Update
| Spread (10Y−3Y) | 08 Jul | 09 Jul 2026 | Δ | NS-DFM |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominal | 1.20 | 1.22 | +0.020 | 1.19 |
| Real | 0.54 | 0.53 | -0.017 | 0.92 |
| Inflation | 0.66 | 0.70 | +0.036 | 0.27 |
All values in percentage points. NS-DFM = Nelson-Siegel Dynamic Factor Model filtered estimate.
When investors and businesses trust that monetary policy will remain credible and predictable, long-term interest rates respond more smoothly to central bank signals. Yield curve spreads between long and short maturities serve as a real-time gauge of this alignment: a stable, upward-sloping curve suggests markets expect gradual normalization, while persistent inversions often signal that markets anticipate policy shifts before they are announced. For Mexico, where inflation targeting depends on anchoring expectations across a diverse investor base, the 10-year minus 3-year spread offers a compact summary of whether policy communication is landing as intended.
Yield curve spreads are filtered using a Nelson-Siegel Dynamic Factor Model (NS-DFM) estimated on weekly data. The model ingests 16 synthetic yield curve points — 11 nominal maturities (overnight through 30 years) and 5 real maturities (overnight through 30 years) — fitted via Nelder-Mead optimization on Banxico bond prices. Factor loadings follow the Diebold-Li (2006) Nelson-Siegel parameterization, decomposing each yield curve into level, slope, and curvature components for both real rates and implied inflation. The Kalman smoother extracts filtered spread estimates that track the underlying signal in daily bond market noise.
Updated: 2026-07-10 by María López

Key Takeaways
With data through July 10, 2026, Mexican equity markets show excess returns at -0.0811 and realized volatility at 0.0095. Mexican equity markets as of July 10, 2026, show excess returns at -0.0811 and realized volatility at 0.0095. Recent updates have revealed a negative risk-return of -0.21, an alarming revision that suggests an increased risk appetite among investors, while the illiquidity measure remains steady. This volatility environment indicates market participants are increasingly cautious, especially as they weigh the implications of potential policy shifts from Banxico against a backdrop of persistent inflation concerns.
The decomposition shows that recent volatility has been driven by US policy shocks and liquidity constraints, underscoring the interconnectedness of global markets. Recent volatility has been driven by US policy shocks and liquidity constraints, which continue to exert influence on Mexican markets. The contributions from these factors indicate that external pressures remain a significant concern, particularly as inflationary dynamics persist. Investors are closely monitoring these developments, as they could prompt shifts in Banxico's approach to monetary policy, especially with rising global inflation pressures complicating the domestic environment.
Investor sentiment remains fragile amid rising uncertainty, with alarm over public security and economic policy dominating discussions. Investor sentiment is increasingly cautious, reflecting alarm over public security issues and economic policy uncertainty that have taken center stage in recent discussions. The AAII sentiment index underscores this unease, while elevated levels of policy uncertainty suggest that market participants are on edge. As they navigate these turbulent waters, the ongoing interplay between security dynamics and economic policy will be crucial in shaping investment strategies moving forward.
Volatility Measures
| Measure | Jun 2026 | Jul 2026 | Δ | Top Driver |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Excess Return | -0.1336 | -0.2095 | -0.0759 | Liquidity and Financing (-0.052) |
| Realized Volatility | 0.0094 | 0.0079 | -0.0016 | Liquidity and Financing (+0.000) |
| Illiquidity (Amihud) | 99.0727 | 72.7397 | -26.3329 | Real-Sector Difficulties (-17.072) |
Monthly averages. Top Driver = largest OLS category contribution to latest value.
Financial market returns, volatility, and liquidity signal investor sentiment and risk appetite. Excess returns over government bonds capture the risk premium investors demand for holding equities; wider spreads suggest higher perceived risk or stronger growth prospects. Realized volatility in a stock market index reflects uncertainty — sharp swings indicate fragile sentiment and raise the cost of capital. Illiquidity shows how trading volume and price impact interact: when liquidity dries up, small trades can move prices disproportionately, amplifying shocks. For monetary policy, these indicators matter because they shape funding costs, investment flows, and the broader transmission of rate decisions into financial conditions.
Volatility drivers are analyzed in two steps. First, Principal Component Analysis (PCA) groups the six SPF concern categories and investor sentiment indicators (AAII bull-bear spread, NAAIM exposure index) into thematic driver clusters that capture common variation. Second, an OLS regression decomposes recent volatility movements into contributions from each driver cluster, quantifying how much of the observed excess return and realized volatility is attributable to policy uncertainty, external sentiment, and domestic macro conditions. The decomposition is descriptive — it identifies contemporaneous associations, not causal effects.
Updated: 2026-07-10 by María López

Key Takeaways
Banxico's July 2026 credit release shows money market spreads tightening, but that’s not the whole story. Following the latest lending data, rate premia have narrowed, with TIIE spreads now sitting at 0.25% for the 28-day rate and 0.29% for the 91-day. This represents a continued tightening trend, as the spread has decreased by 0.0671% month-over-month. While narrowing spreads suggest easing pressures, they also highlight a cautious market, reflecting uncertainty around inflation and economic stability.
Household mortgage rates are creeping up, putting pressure on affordability. The total annual cost of mortgages (CAT) averages 14%, with a range from 10.7% to 28.2%. As rates inch up, the pass-through from the policy rate is becoming a key concern for potential homeowners, raising questions about who can still afford to buy in this environment.
Debt issuance patterns show a clear preference for fixed-rate financing, signaling a shift in corporate strategies. The latest data reveals that 19.47% of corporate debt is now fixed rate, compared to 19.71% variable rates. This shift indicates firms are opting for stability amid rising interest rate uncertainties, reflecting a strategic move to hedge against potential future rate hikes.
Rate premia show how market and bank funding costs move relative to the policy rate, indicating the efficiency of monetary transmission. Household mortgage rates capture the cost of long-term borrowing — their sharp rise in recent years signals affordability pressures and distributional effects, as many families face double-digit costs. Debt issuance patterns, normalized by GDP, reveal how firms finance themselves; the balance between fixed and variable rates matters for vulnerability to policy shifts. Together, these indicators show how policy rates filter into real borrowing conditions, affecting credit demand, investment, and ultimately growth and inflation dynamics.