The City of London woke to unsettling news this morning. Gustavo Petro, a former guerrilla and staunch leftist endorsed by none other than Donald Trump in a bizarre twist of political fate, has clinched the Colombian presidency. For British investors, this is not a moment for idle speculation. The bottom line is clear: our mining and oil assets in the country are now under severe threat.
Let us cut through the diplomatic niceties. Colombia has long been a darling of resource-hungry British firms. AngloGold Ashanti, Rio Tinto, BP and others have sunk billions into gold mines, coal operations and oil fields, lured by what was once considered a stable investment climate. But Petro’s platform of resource nationalism, environmental moratoriums and renegotiation of extraction contracts has sent a chill through the boardrooms of Canary Wharf.
The market’s reaction was swift. The Colombian peso has tumbled, bond yields have spiked, and the FTSE 100’s mining sub-index shed nearly 2% on the news. This is capital flight in the making. Investors fearing expropriation are already seeking exit doors, but in an illiquid market, selling pressure only accelerates the decline. One fund manager I spoke with described the situation as a ‘slow-motion train wreck’ for British interests.
Whitehall is understandably alarmed. The Foreign Office has issued a terse statement expressing hope for ‘continued cooperation’, but behind closed doors, officials are scrambling to assess the damage. The risk is not just to direct investment but to supply chains. Colombia is a key supplier of coal to Britain; any disruption would inflate energy costs at a time when the Treasury is already grappling with inflation.
Petro’s victory also raises broader questions about the durability of the so-called ‘Pink Tide’ in Latin America. With leftist governments now in power in Brazil, Chile, Mexico and Colombia, the region is shifting away from free-market orthodoxy. For British capital, this is a strategic setback. The era of easy resource extraction appears to be closing.
What can be done? In the short term, British firms will lobby for binding arbitration clauses to be respected. But long-term, this is a wake-up call. The government’s obsession with tax havens and deregulation has blinded it to political risk. If we want to secure resource access, we must engage in economic diplomacy, not just cheerlead for free trade.
The Bank of England will also be watching closely. Any sign of contagion to other emerging markets could rattle gilt yields further, complicating the Monetary Policy Committee’s tightening path. The bottom line: Colombia is not a blip. It is a bellwether for the de-risking of global capital flows. Brace yourself for more volatility ahead.