Santiago, Feb 21, 2026, 06:01 GMT-3 — Market closed
- BOLSASTGO last closed flat at 368 Chilean pesos, with trading showing zero volume on Friday
- The exchange operator is due to publish annual financial statements on Feb. 23
- Chile’s S&P CLX IPSA benchmark index ended Friday up 0.43%
Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago shares ended their last session unchanged at 368 Chilean pesos and now sit idle into the weekend, with investors focused on an annual results release due early next week.
That report matters because the company’s earnings tend to move with market activity — trading and listing flows that have been choppy across emerging markets — and because there are few other near-term catalysts for a stock that can go days without a clean price signal.
The wider Santiago market closed the week higher, but BOLSASTGO itself did not show that tone. The next hard datapoint for holders is the company’s year-end numbers, not the tape.
Data from Bloomberg Línea showed BOLSASTGO at 368 pesos on Feb. 20 with zero volume — meaning no shares changed hands on that feed — and a market value of about 17.7 billion pesos. (Bloomberg Línea)
Chile’s benchmark S&P CLX IPSA index rose 0.43% on Friday to 10,855.49, capping a week where investors kept one eye on global risk and another on local rates. (Investing)
The Santiago exchange is shut for the weekend and trades Monday to Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. local time, so the next session is the first chance for price discovery after the break. (Tradinghours)
In a notice dated Jan. 6, the company said it plans to disclose its annual financial statements for the year ended Dec. 31, 2025 on Feb. 23, and set later disclosure dates for 2026 results through November.
Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago operates Chile’s main stock exchange and provides trading and market services to issuers and intermediaries such as brokerages, banks and asset managers. (Reuters)
Investors will be scanning the annual release for how fee income tracked cash-equity activity into year-end, and for any hints on costs tied to technology and market infrastructure. Dividend expectations can also swing on those numbers in Chile’s income-focused pockets, though the company has not flagged anything new this week.
But thin liquidity cuts both ways. Even a solid report can struggle to move a stock when trading is sporadic, and a single order can make the next print look dramatic without changing the underlying story.
The next catalyst is fixed on the calendar: the annual financial statements due Feb. 23. Beyond that, Chile’s central bank has its next monetary policy meeting scheduled for March 24, another event that can reset risk appetite across local assets. (Bcentral)