The Mexican Peso (MXN) trades mixed in its major pairs on Friday as markets digest recent market-moving data. MXN is up against the US Dollar (USD) and the Euro (EUR) but marginally down against the Pound Sterling (GBP), which gained support after the release of solid UK Gross Domestic Product (GDP) data on Thursday.
A surprise drop in the US Consumer Price Index (CPI) for June and the release of the Minutes of the Bank of Mexico (Banxico) June meeting are further factors impacting Mexican Peso pairs as the weekend approaches.
At the time of writing, one US Dollar (USD) buys 17.73 Mexican Pesos, EUR/MXN trades at 19.31, and GBP/MXN at 22.97.
The Mexican Peso trades variably in its key pairs on Friday after the release of the Minutes of the Banxico June policy meeting.
The Peso is holding up despite a change in the distribution of voting at the meeting that suggests interest-rate cuts are on their way.
The Minutes showed that one dissenter (Banxico Deputy Governor Omar Mejía) voted for an interest rate cut of 0.25%, compared to no one voting for a cut at the previous May meeting.
The ten key takeaways from the Minutes are as follows:
USD/MXN continues declining in what is likely the wave C of a falling Measured Move pattern that has formed since the June 12 high.
Measured Moves (MM) are large, three-wave zig-zags in which the end of wave C can be estimated with some degree of reliability using the length of wave A as a guide. C is usually equals A or, at least, a Fibonacci ratio of A.
USD/MXN has already reached the conservative target for wave C, calculated as the 0.618 Fibonacci ratio of the length of wave A. Given that the pair has reached this lesser target, there is a risk it may reverse and start recovering.
A break below 17.70 (July 12 low), however, would reinvigorate bears and probably lead to a move down to the target at the end of wave C, at roughly the level of the 50-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) situated at 17.60.
Meanwhile, the direction of the medium and long-term trends remain in doubt.
The Gross Domestic Product (GDP), released by the Office for National Statistics on a monthly and quarterly basis, is a measure of the total value of all goods and services produced in the UK during a given period. The GDP is considered as the main measure of UK economic activity. The MoM reading compares economic activity in the reference month to the previous month. Generally, a rise in this indicator is bullish for the Pound Sterling (GBP), while a low reading is seen as bearish.
Read more.Last release: Thu Jul 11, 2024 06:00
Frequency: Monthly
Actual: 0.4%
Consensus: 0.2%
Previous: 0%
Source: Office for National Statistics
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