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Chilean Peso Drops Below 950: Mining Rumors and Fed Hawkishness Shake Market Confidence

The Chilean peso began trading on March 31, 2025, at 951.47 per US dollar, reflecting a significant depreciation overnight. However, contrary to earlier claims, this rate is not a historic low for the currency.

On January 3, 2025, the peso reached its weakest level of the year at 1,016.26 CLP/USD, driven by a combination of global economic uncertainty and domestic factors. The recent decline in the peso’s value stems from a convergence of external pressures.

Copper prices, a key driver for Chile’s economy and currency, fell by 1.9% on Friday to $4.22 per pound. This drop undermined support for the peso as Chile relies heavily on copper exports for revenue.

Simultaneously, hawkish comments from Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller dampened expectations of near-term US interest rate cuts, strengthening the dollar against emerging market currencies like the peso.

The peso closed Friday at 936.33 CLP/USD after breaching key technical support levels at 935. Automated trading systems amplified the selloff as stop-loss orders were triggered.

Chilean Peso Drops Below 950: Mining Rumors and Fed Hawkishness Shake Market Confidence. (Photo Internet reproduction)

Trading volumes surged to $320 million during early Asian trading hours, exceeding monthly averages by 15%. Investors also withdrew $47 million from Chile-focused ETFs, signaling waning confidence in the country’s financial markets.

Weekend trading saw further volatility as copper prices dipped to $4.18 before recovering slightly to $4.21 on Sunday. Rumors of labor strikes at Escondida, the world’s largest copper mine located in Chile, added to market jitters, though these reports remain unconfirmed.

The Central Bank of Chile refrained from intervening despite the peso breaking through the 940 level late Sunday night. Market participants have highlighted technical factors exacerbating the peso’s weakness.

Analysts noted that the USD/CLP pair broke through both its 50-day (947) and 200-day (960) moving averages during Monday’s session. The relative strength index (RSI) reached 68.4, indicating room for further dollar gains before overbought conditions emerge.

Hedge funds increased short positions against the peso to $2.1 billion notional value on Friday, while importers rushed to hedge $180 million in exposure amid fears of further depreciation. Options markets now price a 35% probability of the peso testing 975 CLP/USD this week.

Looking ahead, traders are closely monitoring Wednesday’s Federal Reserve minutes and Thursday’s release of Chilean inflation data for further clues on currency direction. With copper prices still volatile and external pressures mounting, analysts expect continued turbulence for the peso in the near term.

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