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Ibovespa Edges Higher As Foreign Money Backs Brazil’s High-Rate Trade

Key Points

  • Wall Street records and a split Fed kept the Ibovespa hovering just below 160,000 points.
  • Foreign inflows lifted Vale, banks and domestic plays while Petrobras and Suzano weighed on the index.
  • High interest rates and noisy politics still draw investors who see Brazil as a rare high-yield, pro-market story.

Brazil’s market starts the day near record territory after a cautious advance on Thursday. The Ibovespa closed at 159,189 points, up 0.07%, while the dollar fell 1.17% to R$ 5.40 as investors leaned back into Brazil’s interest-rate carry.

The move followed a historic session on Wall Street. The Federal Reserve cut rates for the third time in a row, to 3.50–3.75%, in a 9–3 split decision.

The Dow and S&P 500 hit fresh records, while the Nasdaq slipped after Oracle plunged on worries its heavy AI spending will take longer to pay off. Europe rose and most Asian markets stabilised overnight, giving Brazil a supportive backdrop.

Ibovespa Edges Higher As Foreign Money Backs Brazil’s High-Rate Trade. (Photo Internet reproduction)

At home, the Central Bank’s Copom left Selic at 15% and now calls the stance “adequate” for a long period. That tough line keeps real yields among the world’s highest and underpins demand for Brazilian assets despite concerns over looser fiscal plans.

On the upside, health insurer Hapvida jumped 3.4% in a technical rebound after months of punishment. Drugstore group RD Saúde rose 3.2%, jeweller Vivara added 2.7%, investment bank BTG Pactual gained 2.5%, and heavyweight Vale advanced 1.3% on foreign buying even with softer iron-ore prices.

Among the laggards, Suzano sank 4.3% after Investor Day guidance failed to impress. Retail favourite Magazine Luiza slid 4.1%, steelmaker Usiminas fell 2.8%, aircraft maker Embraer dropped 2.6%, and Petrobras lost just over 2% as Brent crude retreated.

Politics stayed in the background but not out of mind. Flávio Bolsonaro repeated he will only abandon his presidential bid if his father can run again, a prospect many investors quietly see as a check on interventionism.

Lula instead highlighted his calls with Nicolás Maduro and Donald Trump, presenting Brazil as a mediator in a region where markets still fear the economic cost of ideological experiments.

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