Más Información
De Diconsa a “Tiendas Bienestar para generar felicidad”; ¿qué productos se venderán a partir de 2025?
Senadores alistan sesiones en estado de la Frontera Norte; realizarán audiencias públicas para conocer problemáticas locales
Noviembre inicia con 88 homicidios; Guanajuato, Guerrero y Jalisco, de los estados con mayor incidencia
Reforma judicial: JUDEF y estudiantes convocan a marcha; será cuando se discuta proyecto del ministro González Alcántara
Economists have long said that when the United States catches a cold, Mexico gets pneumonia. But analysts said Monday that Hillary Clinton's pneumonia has given Mexico's peso something worse.
The Mexican currency reached the psychological barrier of 20 pesos per dollar, and analysts and commentators cited the role of the U.S. presidential campaign.
Banamex, one of Mexico's largest banks, listed the peso at 19.96, and other banks and exchange houses listed it even higher.
A Banco Base analysis said the strength of Republican candidate Donald Trump influenced the peso's decline.
"The possibility that Donald Trump could win the Nov. 8 elections has made financial markets nervous and that has been especially reflected in the Mexican peso," the bank said.
Trump has been critical of Mexico and the trade agreements that give it access to the U.S. market. The U.S. has an outsize influence on Mexico's economy, buying about 80 percent of Mexico's exports.
Newspaper columnist Carlos Loret de Mola said Clinton's health problems are key.
"Speculation broke out against the Mexican currency last week due to the poor health of the Democratic candidate, Hillary Clinton," Loret de Mola wrote in the newspaper El Universal.
Clinton had to leave a Sept. 11 memorial ceremony early, and later revealed she had pneumonia.
Mexico's Treasury Department did not respond to a request for comment on the U.S. campaign's effect on the country's currency.
Oil prices were once cited in the peso's decline, but they have risen somewhat from this year's earlier lows. Concerns about a possible interest rate hike in the United States have also been a long-term drag on the peso.
The peso has dropped almost 17 percent in value in the last year.