Unlike past economic cycles driven by consumer spending, Latin America's next growth phase will likely be fueled by capital expenditures (CAPEX) in infrastructure, AI, and factories, spurred by favorable global and local factors.
Morgan Stanley frames AI-related capital expenditure as one of the largest investment waves ever recorded. This is not just a sector trend but a primary economic driver, projected to be larger than the shale boom of the 2010s and the telecommunications spending of the late 1990s.
Unlike previous years dominated by a single theme, 2026 will require a more nuanced approach. Performance will be driven by a range of factors including country-specific fiscal dynamics, the end of rate-cutting cycles, election outcomes, and beneficiaries of AI capex. Investors must move from a single macro view to a multi-factor differentiation strategy.
After a decade of abundant "growth capex" building new infrastructure, the economic pendulum is swinging towards "maintenance capex." This creates a massive, overlooked opportunity for technologies that service existing assets, like predictive software, acoustic sensors, and remote repair robots.
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.
The longest manufacturing recession on record (3 years of ISM below 50) is reversing. The combination of interest rate relief, 100% accelerated equipment depreciation, and reshoring trends is creating a powerful setup for capital-intensive industries to experience a significant boom.
Three concurrent forces—shifting global supply chains, peaking interest rates, and pro-investment political shifts—are creating a rare CAPEX-led growth cycle in Latin America, moving it beyond its traditional consumer-driven model.
The global shift away from centralized manufacturing (deglobalization) requires redundant investment in infrastructure like semiconductor fabs in multiple countries. Simultaneously, the AI revolution demands enormous capital for data centers and chips. This dual surge in investment demand is a powerful structural force pushing the neutral rate of interest higher.
A surge in capital expenditure indicates rising corporate confidence and, more importantly, a strategic pivot. Companies are moving away from passive stock repurchases, showing an urgency to pursue active growth through investments and acquisitions.
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.
A key driver for Latin American equities will be the reallocation of its own vast domestic capital. Even a minor shift from the region's 90-95% fixed-income allocation could profoundly deepen local equity markets, independent of foreign investment.