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Jose Antonio Kast won Chile's presidential election on Sunday, leveraging voter fears over rising crime and migration to steer the country in its sharpest rightward shift since the end of the military dictatorship in 1990.






Jose Antonio Kast won Chile's presidential election on Sunday, leveraging voter fears over rising crime and migration to steer the country in its sharpest rightward shift since the end of the military dictatorship in 1990.
Kast secured a commanding 58% of the vote in a runoff with leftist candidate Jeannette Jara, who won 42% and swiftly conceded.
Throughout his decades-long political career, Kast has been a consistent right-wing hardliner. He has proposed building border walls, deploying the military to high-crime areas, and deporting all migrants in the country illegally.
His victory marks the latest win for the resurgent right in Latin America. He joins Ecuador's Daniel Noboa, El Salvador's Nayib Bukele, and Argentina's Javier Milei. In October, the election of centrist Rodrigo Paz ended almost two decades of socialist rule in Bolivia.
The campaign was Kast's third run at the presidency and second runoff, after losing to leftist President Gabriel Boric in 2021. Once seen by many Chileans as too extreme, he has attracted voters increasingly worried about crime and immigration.
His definitive win, even in parts of Chile that traditionally vote for leftist candidates, was also likely driven by voter rejection of Jara, who as a member of the Communist Party was seen by many as too extreme, said Claudia Heiss, a political scientist at the University of Chile.
Kast supporters arrived at the president-elect's campaign headquarters in Santiago on Sunday evening, waving Chile flags. Some wore red caps emblazoned "Make Chile Great Again."
Ignacio Segovia, a 23-year-old engineering student, was among them.
"I grew up in a peaceful Chile where you could go out in the street, you had no worry, you went out and you never had problems or fear," he said. "Now you can't go out peacefully."
While Chile remains one of the safest countries in Latin America, violent crime has spiked in recent years as organized crime groups have taken root, capitalizing on the country's porous northern desert borders with coca-producing neighbors Peru and Bolivia, major international marine ports, and surge of migrants susceptible to human and sex trafficking.
The vast majority of migrants in Chile illegally have arrived from Venezuela in recent years, government data shows.
Kast's proposals include creating a police force inspired by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to rapidly detain and expel migrants in the country illegally.
He has also touted massive cuts in public spending.
Chile is the world's largest copper producer and a major producer of lithium, and expectations of less regulation and market-friendly policies have already buoyed the local stock market, peso and equity benchmark.
However, Kast's more radical proposals are likely to face pushback from a divided Congress. While right-wing parties won seats in both legislative houses in a November general election, most of those gains came from more traditional parties. The Senate is evenly split between left and right-wing parties, while the swing vote in the lower legislative body belongs to the populist People's Party.
He will have to satisfy a wide electoral base, said Guillermo Holzmann, a political analyst and professor at the University of Valparaiso.
"It is clear that not everyone who voted for Kast is from his party. That is, much of his vote is borrowed," he said.
That fact may stay Kast's hand on policies like abortion. He has previously been outspoken against abortion and the morning-after pill, but rarely spoke about it during the recent campaign. Changing the country's abortion laws would require the support of more than half of the Congress - and polls suggest most Chileans support existing rights.
A more dovish rate cut than anticipated by the U.S. Federal Reserve has created an interesting setup for fixed income markets next year. The focus on its independence adds another dimension.
As expected, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates last week for the third consecutive time this year, lowering the policy rate by a quarter point to the 3.5 – 3.75% range, the lowest level in three years.
Mounting concerns over a weakening U.S. labor market, outweighing sticky inflation, persuaded the Fed to cut again, with risk markets overall reading a more dovish tone than expected from the meeting, broadly supporting equity indices and helping push front-end Treasury yields lower.
Importantly, Fed Chair Jerome Powell suggested the Fed had now done enough to bolster the threat to employment while leaving rates high enough to continue weighing on price pressures, a framing that could otherwise be read as the Fed is comfortable pausing at this level and waiting to see how the economy performs.
While the majority of the 12 voting Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) members voted for the cut, three dissented Fed governor Stephen Miran, who called for a half-point reduction, and Chicago Fed's Austan Goolsbee and Kansas City Fed's Jeffrey Schmid, who both backed a hold.
Dissent was expected, and even though the numbers were lower than some estimates, it still marked the biggest dispersion among FOMC members since 2019.
So long as there is tension between the balance of risks across the Fed's dual mandate, we expect the divergence in opinion among members on future policy direction will continue.
Interestingly, the FOMC created some optionality on future decisions, stating that in "considering the extent and timing of additional adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate, the Committee will carefully assess incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks."
That assessment will come into play this week as a series of important delayed macro data is released—including the October and November payrolls and unemployment rate for November—potentially giving some indication as to which way the Fed may lean going into next year.
Chair Powell posited that the current level of short-term rates is now "within a broad range of estimates of its neutral value" and argued that any further rate cuts from here would need to come from a combination of materially weaker labor market with a higher unemployment rate.
Whether, and to what extent, we see that, our current baseline expectation is that the FOMC does deliver another quarter-point reduction in the first quarter of 2026, with more cuts potentially through the year should downward pressure be applied by a new dovish FOMC chair.
Powell steps down in May, with Kevin Hassett, President Trump's economic adviser and known dove, seen as the favorite to succeed him although other candidates, including former Fed governor Kevin Warsh, Fed governors Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman, and BlackRock's Rick Rieder, are also on the shortlist being vetted by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. An announcement is expected early in the new year, an event that will likely have read-through across the rates market.
Post the Fed meeting, front-end Treasury yields have followed policy rates lower—a move partly supported by the central bank announcing it would immediately start buying short-dated Treasury bills to help manage market liquidity—yet long-end yields across 10- and 30-year Treasuries have broadly risen.
Higher expected growth rates combined with increasing concerns about fiscal overreach and debt sustainability are among the main factors driving long-end yields higher. Such factors are, therefore, priced in, which in our view suggests the worst may be over for long interest rates, a call we highlighted in our fixed income theme for Solving 2026. Indeed, we would argue that improving carry profiles in longer maturities on the back of lower policy rates should provide support to the long end of yield curves.
Nvidia has told Chinese clients it is evaluating adding production capacity for its powerful H200 AI chips after orders exceeded its current output level, according to two sources briefed on the matter.
The move comes after U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday the U.S. government would allow Nvidia to export H200 processors, its second-fastest AI chips, to China and collect a 25% fee on such sales.
Demand for the chip from Chinese companies is so strong that Nvidia is leaning toward adding new capacity, one of the sources said. They declined to be named as the discussions are private.
"We are managing our supply chain to ensure that licensed sales of the H200 to authorized customers in China will have no impact on our ability to supply customers in the United States," an Nvidia spokesperson said in a statement to Reuters after the story was published.
Major Chinese companies including Alibaba and ByteDance have already reached out to Nvidia this week about purchasing the H200 and are keen to place large orders, Reuters reported on Wednesday.
However, uncertainties remain, as the Chinese government has yet to greenlight any purchase of the H200. Chinese officials convened emergency meetings on Wednesday to discuss the matter and will decide whether to allow it to be shipped into China, said one of the two sources and a third source.
Very limited quantities of H200 chips are currently in production, Reuters reported on Wednesday, as the U.S. AI chip leader is focused on producing its most advanced Blackwell and upcoming Rubin lines.
Supply of H200 chips has been a major concern for Chinese clients and they have reached out to Nvidia seeking clarity on this, sources said.
As part of the briefing provided by Nvidia, the company has also given them guidance on current supply levels, said one of the first two people, without providing a specific number.
The H200 went into mass deployment last year and is the fastest AI chip in Nvidia's previous Hopper generation. The chip is manufactured by TSMC using the Taiwanese firm's 4nm manufacturing process technology.
TSMC declined to comment on capacity allocations for specific customers, pointing instead to recent remarks by Chairman and CEO C.C. Wei on the company's capacity planning approach amid surging AI demand.
China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) did not immediately reply to requests for comment.
Chinese companies' strong demand for the H200 stems from the fact that it is easily the most powerful chip they can currently access.
It is about six times more powerful than the H20, a downgraded chip from Nvidia tailored for the Chinese market that was released in late 2023.
Trump's decision on the H200 comes at a time when China is pushing to promote its own domestic AI chip industry. As domestic chip companies have yet to produce products that match the H200, there have been concerns that allowing the H200 into China could stymie the industry.
"Its (H200) compute performance is approximately 2-3 times that of the most advanced domestically produced accelerators," said Nori Chiou, investment director at White Oak Capital Partners.
"I'm already observing many CSPs (Cloud Service Providers) and enterprise customers aggressively placing large orders and lobbying the government to relax restrictions on a conditional basis," he said, adding Chinese AI demand exceeds the capacity of local production.

During the emergency meetings, there was a proposal to require each H200 purchase to be bundled with a certain ratio of domestic chips, one of the first two sources and a third source said.
For Nvidia, adding new capacity is also challenging at a time when it is not only transitioning to Rubin but also competing with companies including Alphabet's Google for limited advanced chipmaking capacity from TSMC.
It was a Saturday afternoon in the middle of 2024, and Lailatul Sarahjana Mohd Ismail's children were asking – again – to go to McDonald's.
But Ms Lailatul, like scores of other Muslims in Malaysia, was boycotting the fast-food chain and other American brands over US support for Israel.
That choice, in solidarity with the people of Gaza, did not override her kids' craving for fried chicken, one of the chain's most popular offerings in the country.
As the chorus for crispy drumsticks grew louder, Ms Lailatul temporarily quelled the dissent by frying her own at home. And then she went a step further - she launched her own small-scale competitor to the mega chain.
Just over one year in, Ahmad's Fried Chicken – the brand that Ms Lailatul and her husband, Mohd Taufik Khairuddin, which originally started out of a food truck – has grown to 35 outlets. By the end of 2026, that number will soar to about 110.
In Malaysia, customers who have sworn off global restaurant chains in solidarity with Palestine have fuelled a boom in local brands.
Malaysian cafe chain Zuspresso, for instance, which had fewer locations in the country than Starbucks in 2023, doubled its store count in 2024 as Starbucks' shrank.
Today, the chain known as Zus Coffee is the largest coffee purveyor in Malaysia, with more than 700 outlets that sell pumpkin spice lattes as well as concoctions infused with local flavours such as coconut and palm sugar.
Even as the prospects for a peace plan in the Middle East is increasing, the consumer shift to homegrown alternatives appears to have staying power.
"The change is permanent," said Adib Zalkapli, founder of Viewfinder Global Affairs, a geopolitical consulting firm that tracks trends across South-east Asia.
Malaysia is by no means a make-or-break market for major global brands. The size of the food-service industry in the country will almost double to US$27.5 billion (S$35.5 billion) by 2030, said estimates research company Mordor Intelligence. By comparison, in the United States, it will surpass US$1.5 trillion.
But the loss of its customers still has commercial implications, especially since Malaysia is not the only country rethinking its relationship with global consumer brands.
Coca-Cola Icecek, which bottles and sells Coke products in the Middle East, reported a loss of market share in Turkey and Pakistan this summer, following calls to boycott Western companies with perceived links to Israel.
In Indonesia, which has the world's largest Muslim population, KFC's franchise operator Fast Food Indonesia has closed dozens of outlets over the past two years as buyers abstained from its fried chicken. The list goes on.
And once customers made the shift to local brands, many said they are not going back.
Malaysia's Zus Coffee, which expanded to the Philippines in late 2023, has since launched storefronts in Thailand, Singapore and Brunei as it realises everyone, not just Malaysians, want localisation and tailor-made products.
In the Philippines, for example, it is building allegiance by selling coffee drinks flavoured with ube, or purple yam. "This growing confidence in local brands is something we strive to sustain," said Zus chief operating officer Venon Tian.
Of course, not every local brand that thrived during the boycott period will survive.
"Expansion may slow down from resource constraints," said Azizul Amiludin, a senior nonresident fellow at the Malaysian Institute of Economic Research.
And while consumers may be gravitating towards local names now, "legacy brands have their heritage and their strength", said Sydney Lawrance Quays, chief executive officer of Berjaya Food, the operator of Starbucks in Malaysia.
Despite the boycotts, store closures and steep losses triggered by the Gaza conflict, the company still "believes strongly in the Starbucks brand", Mr Quays said, adding that business is gradually recovering.
For now, domestic brands such as Ahmad's Fried Chicken are riding high. The restaurant chain founded by Ms Lailatul and her husband, both 34, brings in about RM3 million (S$947,000) in sales per month, an excellent return on the RM700,000 they initially invested to build the first physical storefront in December 2024.
In Shah Alam – a manufacturing hub in Selangor, Malaysia's most developed state – the bright red exterior and sleek layout of a recently opened Ahmad's could easily be mistaken for any one of the international fast-food chains.
Inside, Faisal Mohamad and his wife settle at a table with fried chicken, fries and soft drinks for lunch.
When it comes to international fast-food brands, "I don't think I'll go back. The local ones are just as good," said Mr Faisal, 41, also a frequent consumer of coffee from Zus. "This has everything the other restaurants offer, minus the political issues."

A Sydney fruit shop owner who wrestled a gun from one of the alleged attackers during the mass shooting at Bondi Beach is recovering in hospital after undergoing surgery for bullet wounds to his arm and hand, his family said.
Forty-three-year-old Ahmed al Ahmed was identified on social media as the bystander who hid behind parked cars before charging at the gunman from behind, seizing his rifle and knocking him to the ground.
Australian police on Monday said a 50-year-old father and his 24-year-old son carried out the attack at a Jewish celebration at Bondi Beach on Sunday afternoon, killing 15 people in the country's worst mass shooting in almost 30 years.
Ahmed's cousin Mustafa told 7News Australia that doctors had informed the family that Ahmed was stable following surgery.
"He is a hero, he is a hundred percent hero," Mustafa said.
"Still he is in the hospital and we don't know exactly what's going on inside ... but we hope he will be fine."
Tributes have poured in from leaders both abroad and at home.
U.S. President Donald Trump called Ahmed "a very, very brave person" who saved many lives. Chris Minns, the premier of New South Wales state where Sydney is located, has hailed him "a genuine hero" and said the video was "the most unbelievable scene I've ever seen".
A GoFundMe campaign has been set up for Ahmed with just over A$200,000 ($132,900) raised in a few hours. Billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman was the largest donor, contributing A$99,999 and sharing the fundraiser on his X account.
($1 = 1.5049 Australian dollars)
Oil was steady near the lowest level in almost two months as fears of a glut outweighed heightened geopolitical tensions.
Brent traded near $61 a barrel after closing at the lowest level since Oct. 20 on Friday, while West Texas Intermediate was below $58. Oil is set for an annual loss on expectations for a swelling surplus as OPEC+ and other producers pump more despite consumption growth remaining sluggish.
Still, geopolitical uncertainty has injected some risk premium into prices and kept oil from tumbling. Ukraine continues to attack Russian infrastructure, hitting a major refinery as well as an oil depot over the weekend. The US has dispatched envoys for another round of talks to try and end the war.
Elsewhere, Iran said it seized a foreign tanker in the Gulf of Oman it suspected of carrying smuggled fuel, while the US last week intercepted a vessel off Venezuela as President Donald Trump ramps up pressure on the regime of Nicolas Maduro.
Oil trading activity is expected to be thin heading into the Christmas and New Year holidays, which will likely mean choppy trading.
China and Saudi Arabia agreed to have closer communication and coordination on regional and international issues, with Beijing lauding Riyadh's role in Middle East diplomacy, statements following a meeting between the nations' foreign ministers on Sunday showed.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi is on a three-nation tour in the Middle East that began in the United Arab Emirates and is expected to end in Jordan. He met with Saudi Arabia's Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud in Riyadh on Sunday.
A joint statement published by China's official news agency Xinhua did not elaborate on what issues the countries will strengthen coordination on, but mentioned China's support for Saudi Arabia and Iran developing and enhancing their relations.
"(China) appreciates Saudi Arabia's leading role and efforts to achieve regional and international security and stability," the statement released on Monday said.
The statement also reiterated both countries' support for a "comprehensive and just settlement" of the Palestinian issue and the formation of an independent state for Palestinians.
At a high-level meeting, Wang told his Saudi counterpart that China has always regarded Saudi Arabia as a "priority for Middle East diplomacy" and an important partner in global diplomacy, a Chinese foreign ministry statement on Monday said.
He also encouraged more cooperation in energy and investments, as well as in the fields of new energy and green transformation.
The countries have agreed to mutually exempt visas for diplomatic and special passport holders from both sides, according to the joint statement.
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