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Mexico GDP Falls; World Cup Key to Economic Recovery

  • All sectors declined, with primary seeing the sharpest dip
  • Analysts expect World Cup to aid near‑term recovery
  • Weak GDP data could pressure central bank to cut rates

MEXICO CITY, (Reuters) - Mexico's economy contracted 0.8% in the first quarter from the previous three-month period, preliminary data showed on Thursday, an unexpected slowdown ahead of the FIFA World Cup in June that analysts ​expect to lightly boost growth.

The decline in Latin America's second-largest economy was wider ​than the 0.5% contraction forecast from economists polled by Reuters. The ⁠economy expanded 0.9% in the prior quarter, according to final data.

"Near‑term momentum remains subdued, ​but we still anticipate a gradual recovery supported by firmer domestic demand and a ​modest boost from the 2026 FIFA World Cup" soccer tournament, Itau chief economist Mario Mesquita said in a note.

Itau estimates that the World Cup, which Mexico is co-hosting along with the U.S. ​and Canada, will add 0.1 percentage point to Mexico's annual gross domestic product growth forecast at 1.1% ​for 2026, compared with growth in 2025 of 0.8%.

Still, analysts expect global trade tensions to weigh ‌on ⁠growth and to impact decisions by the Bank of Mexico, also known as Banxico.

Capital Economics analysts said there is a strong case for a rate cut of 25 basis points at Banxico's meeting next week.

"In the past, disappointing GDP releases have prompted ​Banxico to act," they ​said in a ⁠note.

The central bank's decision in March to cut its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points to 6.75% was divided, with board ​members signaling the need for greater caution.

DECLINES ACROSS THE BOARD

All sectors ​in Mexico's ⁠economy registered declines during the January-to-March period. The primary sector had the sharpest dip, down 1.4%.

Secondary and tertiary activities, respectively covering manufacturing and services, declined 1.1% and 0.6% in ⁠a ​sequential basis.

Compared with the same period a year earlier, ​growth in the first quarter was a modest 0.1%, below economists' expectations for 0.8%.

Reporting by Aida Pelaez-Fernandez and ​Jorge Ollero; Additional Reporting by Noe Torres; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne and Bernadette Baum

Source: Reuters


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