Despite political polarization, FX volatility is expected to be less than half of the 20% depreciation seen in the last cycle. This is due to a less tense social fabric, more moderate economic agendas, and strong institutions that have proven effective at limiting executive power and radical reforms.

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Emerging market central banks' hawkish commentary while cutting rates reinforces market stability. This low volatility, in turn, gives them confidence to continue the cutting cycle. This feedback loop can make low-volatility periods surprisingly persistent, as the actions and outcomes mutually reinforce each other.

Given the unreliability of polling, markets will wait for tangible results before reacting. The composition of congress will be the first concrete signal, with a divided or right-leaning legislature seen as a positive check on executive power. This could trigger currency rallies well before the final presidential outcome is known.

While most Latam rates are well-positioned, Peru is an outlier. The country's bonds appear expensive, treasury spreads are near historic lows, and foreign ownership is close to 50% of the total stock. This combination creates heightened risk for a pronounced sell-off, similar to its 200 bps underperformance in 2021.

The success of the current EM FX carry trade isn't driven by wide interest rate differentials, which are not historically high. Instead, the strategy is performing well because a resilient global growth environment is suppressing currency volatility, making it profitable to hold high-yielding currencies against low-yielders.

Despite a packed calendar of central bank decisions and key data releases, broad FX volatility is hovering near five-year lows. This suggests investors are underpricing potential market moves, and current options pricing for events like U.S. payrolls may be insufficient to cover a significant data surprise.

A historical review places 2026 in the second-lowest decile for central bank rate activity (hikes/cuts). This data strongly suggests a contained FX volatility environment, as significant vol spikes historically occur only during periods of extremely high or low central bank intervention.

Brazil's next election presents a major catalyst. An opposition win would likely unlock pent-up investment and allow high real interest rates to fall, creating a virtuous cycle. Conversely, a win for the incumbent party would likely keep rates higher for longer, suppressing growth and investment.

With the exception of Brazil's BRL, investor positioning in Latam currencies is not over-extended. This means the magnitude of currency moves should be similar in either a government continuity or transition scenario, creating a balanced risk profile rather than a one-sided vulnerability to a specific political outcome.

Unlike the 2021-22 cycle which coincided with post-COVID overheating, Latam economies now boast a more resilient backdrop with lower current account deficits, positive real policy rates, and moderated inflation. This strength, coupled with appealing valuations, provides a substantial cushion against political volatility for local rates markets.

J.P. Morgan forecasts a significant divergence in Latin America for 2026. Brazil's growth is expected to slow dramatically from 2% to just 1%. In contrast, the rest of the region, which underperformed in 2025, is projected to accelerate, led primarily by a strengthening Mexican economy.

Latam FX Markets Poised for Lower Volatility in Upcoming Elections Versus 2021-22 Cycle | RiffOn