Peru’s presidential election has become a knife-edge contest, with insecurity the defining issue. Sources on the ground confirm that voters are gripped by fear as crime surges and political instability deepens. The frontrunners, a far-left teacher and a right-wing populist, offer starkly different remedies but share one grim reality: neither can promise safety.
For British companies with exposure to Peru’s mining and energy sectors, the warning lights are flashing. A senior analyst at a London-based risk consultancy told me: ‘The volatility is unprecedented. We’re advising clients to hedge hard and delay non-essential investments until after the run-off.’
Documents obtained by this correspondent show that the Foreign Office has quietly updated its travel advice, warning of ‘increased risk of civil unrest and crime’. The official line remains cautious, but sources inside the embassy in Lima describe a mood of ‘deep unease’.
Peru’s murder rate has climbed 20% in two years. Kidnappings, extortion and carjackings are now daily headlines. The state’s response has been chaotic. Police corruption is rampant, and the judiciary is seen as toothless. In the highlands, coca growers and remnants of Shining Path terrorise communities.
The economic cost is mounting. Foreign direct investment dropped 12% last year. The mining sector, which accounts for 60% of exports, is struggling with strikes and blockades. British firms operating in the region have reported ‘significant disruptions’ to supply chains.
But it’s the political dimension that alarms analysts. The leftist candidate, Pedro Castillo, has promised to nationalise key industries and rewrite the constitution. His rival, Keiko Fujimori, is tainted by corruption scandals and her father’s authoritarian past. Neither enjoys broad support; polls show a dead heat.
‘Whoever wins, they inherit a fractured country,’ said a former Peruvian finance minister. ‘The next president will have to restore order or face a collapse of legitimacy.’
The financial markets are already pricing in risk. The sol has weakened 8% this year. Bond yields have spiked. Credit rating agencies have downgraded Peru’s outlook to negative.
For British investors, the advice is blunt: diversify. ‘Don’t put all your gold in one mine,’ one fund manager told me. Others are more cynical, noting that volatility is also an opportunity for those with deep pockets and nerves of steel.
Behind the numbers, there is a human cost. I spoke to a Lima shopkeeper who was robbed three times in a month. ‘The politicians don’t care,’ she said. ‘They fight each other while we suffer.’ Her words echo across a country where insecurity has become the only constant.
As Peruvians head to the polls, the world watches. But for those with a stake in the outcome, the message is clear: buckle up. The ride is going to get rougher.








