Crypto Market Cap:Total: BTC:
Crypto Volume:Total: BTC:
Dominance:BTC: ETH:
Gold:

Americas Currency Exchange Rates

Track exchange rates for currencies across the Americas, from North to South America. Monitor the US Dollar (USD), Canadian Dollar (CAD), Mexican Peso (MXN), Brazilian Real (BRL), Argentine Peso (ARS), and other regional currencies.

USD
USD
CAD
CAD
MXN
MXN
BRL
BRL
ARS
ARS
CLP
CLP
COP
COP
PEN
PEN
USD
USD
CAD
CAD
MXN
MXN
BRL
BRL
ARS
ARS
CLP
CLP
COP
COP
PEN
PEN

Americas Currency Features

Track all major currencies from North and South America including USD, CAD, MXN, BRL, ARS, CLP, COP, and PEN with real-time exchange rate updates.

Monitor the relationship between commodity currencies like CAD (oil) and BRL (agricultural) to understand regional economic dynamics.

Compare Latin American currencies to identify opportunities during regional political or economic events affecting multiple countries.

Access real-time data on currency movements related to US Federal Reserve policy decisions that impact the entire Americas region.

Why Track Americas Currencies

The Americas region offers diverse currency trading opportunities from the world's reserve currency (USD) to emerging market currencies across Latin America. The US Dollar and Canadian Dollar are major currencies with deep liquidity, while Mexican Peso (MXN), Brazilian Real (BRL), and other Latin American currencies provide higher volatility trading opportunities. Understanding regional currency correlations is key to trading Americas currencies effectively. CAD closely follows oil prices, while BRL responds to agricultural commodities and Chinese demand. US Federal Reserve policy ripples throughout the region, creating simultaneous movements in multiple currencies. Our cross rates table helps you compare all Americas currencies to identify relative strength and potential trading opportunities.

Americas Currencies FAQ

USD is the world's most traded currency, followed by CAD among Americas currencies. MXN is the most liquid emerging market currency globally due to its proximity to the US.

Canada is a major oil exporter, so CAD often rises with oil prices. USD/CAD typically has an inverse correlation with crude oil, falling when oil rises and vice versa.

MXN is sensitive to US economic data, Fed policy, oil prices, and risk sentiment. Its high liquidity for an emerging currency attracts speculative trading, increasing volatility.

Latin American currencies respond to commodity prices, US dollar strength, domestic political events, and global risk appetite. Risk-off environments typically strengthen USD against all LatAm currencies.