Mexico’s benchmark IPC index posts a volatile pattern, moving repeatedly around the 70,000-point level across multiple sessions. Several reports show sharp reversals and retracements: the IPC falls about 1.86% to 66,141 on June 5, and later drops back below 70,000 after briefly rising above it in prior sessions. Other coverage describes the index testing downside levels—briefly touching around 67,710 during the day—then recovering most of those losses into the close. Additional sessions reflect range-bound trading, with the IPC easing modestly to the high-60,000s or slipping back into a “quiet range” that it has held for months. At other points, the index rebounds, including a climb of roughly 1.19% to just above 70,000 and another gain around 1.37% to near 69,198, attributed in the reports to the “Banxico anchor” holding steady. Across the articles, a stronger U.S. dollar is cited as a recurring influence, alongside fading expectations for U.S. rate cuts and limited fresh catalysts as the World Cup and USMCA-related dates approach.