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Sinaloa registra último día de junio como el más violento en su historia; impone récord de 30 asesinatos

Nuevos ministros de la Corte sí usarán toga; Hugo Aguilar sumará a vestidura distintivo de los pueblos indígenas

Sheinbaum llama a Diego Sinhue a esclarecer polémica de casa en Texas; "debe aclarar el presunto acto de corrupción", dice

Senado aprueba en lo general Ley de Seguridad Pública Nacional; oposición llama a Morena "gobierno espía"

Legisladora Laura Itzel Castillo afirma que sería un honor presidir el Senado; agradece respaldo de Noroña

Dictan prisión preventiva a detenidos por crematorio en Ciudad Juárez; se hallaron 383 cuerpos sin incinerar
Mexico's central bank on Tuesday said it sold US$107 million of US$200 million offered in an auction to support the peso currency at an average price of 16.3274 pesos per dollar.
Latin American currencies fell on Tuesday after China's decision to devalue the yuan by nearly 2 percent fueled a sharp drop in commodities prices as well as concerns about the competitiveness of emerging market exporters.
Latin America's most traded currencies - including those of Mexico, Brazil, Chile, and Colombia - all dropped about 1 percent following the Chinese move, which raised questions about Beijing's commitment to a strong yuan as part of a strategy to stimulate domestic consumption rather than exports.
"China's unexpected currency devaluation is driving broad-based risk aversion across markets as participants consider its implications for global commodity demand, inflation, and the balance of risks to growth," analysts with Scotiabank wrote in a report.