The chatter in Threadneedle Street is turning jittery over Peru. Word from the City is clear: the sovereign risk warning lights are flashing amber. This isn't just another Latin American wobble. Peru's upcoming presidential runoff is shaping up to be a knife-edge contest, with both candidates mired in controversy and violence on the campaign trail escalating.
Leaks from a private briefing between the Foreign Office and top UK fund managers reveal deep unease. The question on everyone's lips: can Peru's institutions hold? The polls are tightening. Keiko Fujimori, the authoritarian’s daughter, is neck-and-neck with leftist Pedro Castillo. Both have promised to rewrite the economic rulebook. One advisor I spoke to called it a 'choice between the plague and cholera' for markets.
But it's the insecurity that's really spooking the suits. Armed convoys for candidates. Attack ads swapped for death threats. This isn't the stable Peru that opened its arms to UK pension funds. The British Embassy in Lima has issued a stark travel advisory. That's usually the signal for hedge funds to start hedging.
Backbench MPs on the International Development Committee are already sharpening their questions. They want to know what 'contingency plans' HMT has for UK exposures. One source muttered that the £2 billion trade relationship is 'under review.' That's code for jitters.
Don't expect a sudden crash. Cooler heads point out that Peru has been here before. Fujimori’s mentor Alberto Fujimori squared off against leftists in the 90s. Markets survived. But the difference this time? The middle ground has collapsed. Polarisation is at fever pitch. And the security vacuum means no one can guarantee a peaceful transition.
For UK investors, the message is simple: diversify or get burned. The sovereign risk is real, not just a headline. The game is now about managing the downside. Watch the bond spreads. If they blow out beyond 200 basis points, the lobby will be buzzing with emergency meetings. My gut says we're closer to that than the Treasury wants to admit.










