Chile’s main stock index, the IPSA, shows choppy trading over multiple sessions, swinging between gains and declines as copper prices soften and the peso reacts to a broad dollar bid. On June 5, the IPSA holds relatively steady, slipping about 0.30% to around 10,273 despite weakness in copper and lithium and a slide in the peso. Other days also reflect sensitivity to commodities: the index rises in some sessions when copper appears to “hold” and market expectations shift toward possible rate cuts ahead of a June policy meeting. For example, the IPSA climbs for a second straight day to near 10,897, then later reverses as copper’s lift fades. Several declines follow, including drops of roughly 1% to around 10,788, about 1.5% to around 10,626, and other moves that bring the index down toward key long-term support levels near the line it has held through the year. Across the reports, a recurring theme is that a stronger dollar and softer copper pressure domestic equities, while brief copper stabilization and rate-cut expectations temporarily support rebounds.