Brazil’s Bond Boom: Record Borrowing Despite High Rates
Markets
Key Facts
Brazil corporate bonds are booming to record levels at the strangest possible moment, with companies borrowing huge sums through the market even though the country’s interest rates sit near their highest in two decades.
Something unusual is happening in Brazil’s debt market. Companies are raising money at a record pace through bonds known locally as debentures, the corporate IOUs that firms sell to investors.
What makes it striking is the backdrop. Brazil’s benchmark interest rate stands at fourteen and a quarter per cent, close to a twenty-year peak, which should make borrowing painfully expensive.
Yet the issuance keeps breaking records. For a foreign investor, the puzzle is worth unpacking: why are Brazilian companies borrowing so heavily when money is this dear?
How big the Brazil corporate bonds boom has become
The numbers are large by any measure. According to ANBIMA, the body that tracks Brazil’s capital markets, debenture sales reached almost four hundred and ninety-three billion reais in 2025, around ninety-five billion dollars, the highest total ever recorded.
The pace carried into 2026. The first quarter set a fresh record for the period, with capital-markets offerings of about one hundred and eighty billion reais, roughly thirty-five billion dollars, and debentures again leading the way.
Trading has surged too. Activity in the secondary market, where these bonds change hands after issue, jumped by about a third in 2025 to nearly nine hundred and fifty billion reais, a sign the market is maturing.
Fixed income now dominates Brazil’s capital markets, accounting for roughly four-fifths of all money raised. Debentures sit at the centre of that, the workhorse instrument for corporate Brazil.
Why companies borrow when rates are this high
The first reason is simple necessity. After years of high rates, many companies face a wall of older, more expensive debt, and they are issuing new bonds to refinance it on better terms.
The second is infrastructure. Brazil has leaned on a special class of tax-exempt debentures to fund roads, power lines and sanitation, and investors love them because the income arrives free of tax.
A tax scare then poured fuel on the fire. When the government floated a plan in 2025 to start taxing those exempt bonds, companies rushed to issue them before any change took effect, and investors rushed to buy.
There is also a deeper shift underway. Brazilian firms are increasingly choosing the bond market over traditional bank loans, drawn by longer maturities that now stretch to around eight years on average.
Who is buying the Brazil corporate bonds
Demand has broadened well beyond the big institutions. Ordinary savers, hunting for the high returns that come with high rates, have poured money into the funds that buy these bonds.
Those funds, flush with cash, then need to put it to work. That steady inflow has given companies a reliable pool of buyers, which helps explain why issuance holds up even when borrowing costs are steep.
Energy and transport firms have led the borrowing. Power and logistics companies took the largest shares, raising money to build the infrastructure Brazil’s economy still badly needs.
The 2025 league table shows how broad it has become. Electricity companies alone raised close to one hundred and twenty billion reais, with transport, finance and sanitation following, and more than two dozen sectors tapping the market in all.
The bonds are also getting longer. Average maturities have stretched toward eight years, and the tax-exempt infrastructure notes often run beyond a decade, locking in funding well past the current rate cycle.
What it means for investors
For investors, the boom is a window into how corporate Brazil is financing itself, and the picture is healthier than a casual glance suggests. Companies locking in longer-term funding are better insulated against the next shock than those rolling over short-term bank loans.
There are risks worth watching, all the same. A boom built partly on a tax scare could cool once that fear fades, and a market this dependent on local fund inflows is vulnerable if savers pull back.
The real test arrives when rates eventually fall. Cheaper money would normally widen the appetite for long-term bonds, which could keep the boom running rather than ending it.
The wider lesson reaches beyond Brazil. A deep, busy corporate-bond market is a sign of financial maturity, giving companies a way to fund themselves that does not depend solely on the banks.
Brazil corporate bonds questions, answered
What are debentures in Brazil?
Debentures are corporate bonds, a way for companies to borrow directly from investors instead of from a bank. They are the main instrument Brazilian firms use to raise money in the capital markets.
Why is the Brazil corporate bonds market booming now?
Companies are refinancing expensive old debt, funding infrastructure with tax-exempt bonds, and rushing to issue before a possible tax change. Strong demand from local funds and savers chasing high returns has kept buyers plentiful.
Is borrowing at high interest rates a problem?
It can be, but many firms are using the bonds to replace even costlier debt and to lock in longer terms. That can leave them better protected than relying on short-term bank loans, though risks remain if demand fades.
Frequently Asked Questions
How large has Brazil's corporate bond market become in 2025?
Debenture sales in Brazil reached R2.8bn (bn) in 2025, the most ever recorded. This figure is tracked by ANBIMA, the body that monitors Brazil's capital markets.
Why are Brazilian companies issuing so many bonds despite high interest rates?
A 2025 tax-change threat pushed firms to rush into tax-exempt infrastructure bonds before the window closed. Companies are also shifting away from bank lending toward capital markets, securing longer borrowing terms in the process.
What are Brazilian companies using the bond proceeds for?
Most of the money raised through debenture sales is used to fund infrastructure projects and to refinance older, costlier debt. This dual purpose has helped sustain demand for issuance even with the benchmark Selic rate sitting near a twenty-year high of 14.25%.
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