The email
Mexico, from the official numbers.
Two or three mornings a week: what moved in Mexican politics, business, and money, with every figure dated and linked to the institution that published it. The email is free.
The brief — free
Two or three emails a week, in the morning. The address is used only for the brief and never shared, and one tap unsubscribes.
Read the latest issue →
- The core numbers. The peso, inflation, the Banxico rate, remittances, US–Mexico trade, and tariff actions, pulled from the institutions that produce them, each with its as-of date.
- The week in one read. Politics, companies, fintech, and deals, summarized from the original reporting, with a link to every source.
- Every claim links to its source. Each figure links to the institution that published it, and each story to the original reporting.
Why it's different
Most coverage of Mexico starts with a take and borrows the numbers. This starts with the numbers: from Banxico, INEGI, and the official record, each dated so you can see how current it is and linked so you can check it yourself.
What's inside
- Top of the week. The two or three stories that mattered most, ranked. The length follows the news, so a quiet week is shorter.
- The board. The peso, headline and core inflation, the Banxico rate, remittances, and two-way US–Mexico trade. Each shows the latest value, the direction it moved, and the date it is from.
- The rooms. Politics, companies and deals, economy, payments and fintech, US–Mexico. A room appears only when something happened in it.
- What to watch. The dated calendar ahead: rate decisions, inflation releases, USMCA milestones.
How it's made
The board is computed by code from official sources: Banxico, INEGI, and the US Census Bureau. The lead summaries are written only from the fetched text of the source articles, and every headline links to it. Tariff and trade items come straight from the US Federal Register, in the government's own words.
Every issue is reviewed by a person before it sends.
The rest of the site
The weekly covers what moved this week. The Briefing answers standing questions about Mexico's economy, security, and politics, refreshed every six hours. See the Economy room, the state-by-state Atlas, or the Sources catalog behind it.