Mexico's central bank said on Monday that it will begin complementing its existing liquidity-management tools with the ability to repurchase short-term government securities in the secondary market from the third quarter of 2026, a move aimed at improving the implementation of monetary policy and supporting money-market functioning.
The Bank of Mexico said in a statement that the new mechanism will allow it to conduct purchases of Treasury bills, known as CETES, and floating-rate government bonds known as Bondes F, for monetary-regulation purposes when liquidity conditions in money markets warrant intervention.