IBOV 177,866 ▲ 2.97% IPSA 11,057 ▲ 0.28% IPC MEX 66,496 ▲ 0.59% MERVAL 3,280,224 ▲ 2.43% COLCAP 2,307.67 ▲ 0.65% BVL PERÚ 56,194.27 ▲ 1.29% USD/BRL5.11▲ 0.02% USD/MXN17.48▲ 0.05% USD/CLP923.90▼ 0.41% USD/COP3,237▼ 0.27% USD/PEN3.41▲ 0.51% USD/ARS1,487▼ 0.03% USD/UYU40.22▲ 1.37% USD/PYG6,055▲ 1.45% USD/BOB10.14▲ 4.01% USD/DOP58.65▲ 0.29% USD/CRC448.82▲ 1.41% USD/GTQ7.63▲ 2.31% USD/HNL26.72▲ 0.09% USD/NIO 36.62 — 0.00% USD/VES719.54▼ 0.13% USD/PAB1.00— 0.00% USD/BZD2.00— 0.00% USD/JMD158.09▲ 0.40% USD/TTD6.75▲ 1.44% EUR/BRL5.84▲ 0.30% BRENT 78.62 ▲ 3.43% WTI 73.88 ▲ 3.46% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.28 ▲ 0.68% GOLD 4,072 ▼ 0.78% SILVER 58.84 ▼ 1.63% SOY 1,198 ▲ 0.10% CORN 466.00 ▲ 6.39% WHEAT 637.50 ▲ 0.87% COFFEE 327.90 ▼ 4.40% SUGAR 14.77 ▼ 0.74% ORANGE JUICE 143.25 ▼ 4.44% COTTON 81.35 ▲ 1.79% COCOA 5,573 ▼ 5.85% BEEF 230.55 ▼ 2.00% CATTLE 354.60 ▼ 0.44% LITHIUM 72.32 ▼ 0.69% PETR4 39.65 ▲ 1.12% VALE3 74.18 ▲ 1.41% ITUB4 44.30 ▲ 4.02% BBDC4 18.86 ▲ 4.78% ABEV3 15.82 ▲ 0.64% BBAS3 20.58 ▲ 2.90% B3SA3 15.42 ▲ 4.26% WEGE3 46.51 ▲ 1.68% PRIO3 55.45 ▼ 0.29% SUZB3 41.55 ▲ 1.27% RENT3 41.10 ▲ 4.31% AZZA3 19.10 ▲ 3.47% CSAN3 4.07 ▲ 5.44% RAIZ4 0.35 ▼ 5.41% PCAR3 2.73 ▼ 1.09% GMAT3 3.97 ▲ 1.02% PSSA3 54.97 ▲ 3.04% CVCB3 1.25 — 0.00% POSI3 3.97 ▲ 3.12% SLCE3 14.02 ▲ 1.67% NATU3 8.68 ▲ 2.60% BRKM5 6.63 ▲ 4.25% RANI3 8.01 ▲ 1.91% CSNA3 5.18 ▲ 7.92% CMIN3 5.23 ▲ 8.28% USIM5 8.45 ▲ 1.20% GGBR4 23.01 ▲ 2.36% ENEV3 27.55 ▲ 5.15% CPFE3 47.87 ▲ 3.41% CMIG4 11.38 ▲ 2.71% EQTL3 40.91 ▲ 3.54% LREN3 14.62 ▲ 3.32% VIVT3 35.75 ▲ 3.62% RAIL3 14.36 ▲ 4.44% KLABIN 17.54 ▲ 0.80% RAIA DROGASIL 18.77 ▲ 3.53% RDOR3 36.02 ▲ 2.48% HAPV3 10.60 ▲ 5.26% FLRY3 16.42 ▲ 4.25% SMTO3 16.37 ▲ 1.99% UGPA3 30.71 ▲ 2.03% VBBR3 33.00 ▲ 2.80% BBSE3 40.35 ▲ 2.72% BPAC11 58.73 ▲ 5.48% CURY3 34.21 ▲ 4.62% AERI3 2.09 ▲ 1.46% VIVARA 23.53 ▲ 4.21% COMPASS 25.50 ▲ 3.32% VAMOS 3.06 ▲ 3.38% SANB11 27.62 ▲ 5.22% ASAI3 8.87 ▲ 4.85% SBSP3 31.11 ▲ 3.70% WALMEX 49.31 ▲ 0.59% GMEXICO 198.62 ▲ 1.68% FEMSA 223.20 ▲ 0.37% CEMEX 21.82 ▲ 0.51% GFNORTE 186.51 ▲ 0.63% BIMBO 56.06 ▲ 0.23% TELEVISA 9.74 ▲ 2.63% AMX 22.70 ▲ 0.27% GAP 412.01 ▼ 0.41% ASUR 285.12 ▲ 0.53% OMA 235.73 ▼ 0.95% KOF 182.08 ▲ 0.65% GRUMA 282.99 ▲ 0.14% KIMBER 38.13 ▼ 0.81% SQM-B 67,750 ▼ 1.95% COPEC 6,139 ▲ 1.98% BSANTANDER 79.00 ▲ 1.94% FALABELLA 5,905 ▲ 0.92% ENELAM 85.40 ▲ 1.47% CENCOSUD 2,045 ▼ 0.55% CMPC 1,109 ▲ 1.32% BANCO CHILE 188.88 ▲ 1.01% LATAM AIR 26.26 ▼ 0.53% YPF 74,450 ▼ 1.75% GGAL 8,350 ▲ 5.96% PAMPA 5,185 ▼ 0.38% TXAR 671.00 ▲ 0.98% ALUAR 978.00 ▲ 0.98% TGS 9,610 ▲ 3.22% CEPU 2,405 ▲ 3.89% MIRGOR 17,375 ▲ 1.02% COME 45.90 ▲ 1.06% LOMA NEGRA 3,583 ▲ 2.43% BYMA 314.00 ▲ 1.37% TELECOM ARG 4,248 ▲ 3.09% ECOPETROL 15.59 ▲ 1.27% BANCOLOMBIA 82.95 ▲ 2.50% GRUPO AVAL 5.08 ▲ 1.20% CREDICORP 400.81 ▲ 2.27% SOUTHERN COPPER 175.83 ▲ 0.80% BUENAVENTURA 30.00 ▲ 1.52% MERCADOLIBRE 1,852 ▲ 2.46% NUBANK 13.76 ▲ 0.66% XP 16.92 ▲ 3.11% PAGSEGURO 9.25 ▲ 2.78% STONE 11.21 ▲ 2.28% GLOBANT 29.96 ▼ 4.25% TECNOGLASS 43.90 ▲ 1.76% GAP AIRPORT 235.64 ▲ 0.50% ASUR 285.12 ▲ 0.53% OMA AIRPORT 108.09 ▼ 0.22% AMX ADR 26.04 ▲ 0.77% FEMSA ADR 127.70 ▲ 0.55% CEMEX ADR 12.48 ▲ 0.89% PETROBRAS ADR 17.32 ▲ 1.70% VALE ADR 14.46 ▲ 1.69% ITAU ADR 8.62 ▲ 4.11% SANTANDER BR 5.39 ▲ 4.86% AMBEV ADR 3.07 ▲ 0.99% CSN 1.01 ▲ 5.79% GERDAU 4.50 ▲ 2.04% LATAM ADR 56.45 ▼ 1.03% BTC 62,947 ▼ 1.27% ETH 1,780 ▼ 1.44% SOL 76.33 ▼ 0.71% XRP 1.08 ▼ 0.67% BNB 569.57 ▼ 0.76% ADA 0.16 ▼ 1.39% DOGE 0.07 ▼ 0.46% AVAX 6.62 ▲ 3.41% LINK 7.94 ▼ 0.70% DOT 0.84 ▼ 0.97% LTC 43.63 ▼ 0.77% BCH 238.55 ▼ 0.59% TRX 0.33 ▼ 1.18% XLM 0.18 ▼ 0.85% HBAR 0.07 ▼ 0.94% NEAR 1.92 ▲ 1.50% ATOM 1.55 ▼ 1.16% AAVE 96.42 ▼ 0.66% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 84.60 ▲ 0.88% EMBRAER ADR 66.01 ▲ 0.72% JBS 11.91 ▲ 1.53% JBS BDR 60.78 ▲ 1.22% MBRF3 15.55 ▲ 0.91% MBRFY 2.97 ▼ 1.00% INTER 5.82 ▲ 1.93% EGX 52,569 ▲ 0.60% USD/ZAR16.35▲ 0.18% USD/NGN 1,376 — 0.00% NIKKEI 67,243 ▼ 1.92% CSI300 4,695 ▼ 1.79% HSI 24,214 ▲ 0.16% NIFTY 24,211 ▲ 0.02% KOSPI 6,807 ▼ 8.95% JCI 6,038 ▲ 1.92% USD/JPY162.13▲ 0.26% USD/CNY6.77▼ 0.17% DAX 25,106 ▲ 0.16% CAC 8,345 ▲ 0.07% FTSE 10,486 ▼ 0.11% MIB 52,765 ▲ 0.29% IBEX 19,408 ▲ 0.12% STOXX 640.62 ▼ 0.07% EUR/USD1.14▲ 0.26% GBP/USD1.34— 0.00% SPX 7,575 ▲ 0.42% DJI 52,637 ▲ 0.29% NDX 29,825 ▲ 0.33% RUT 2,978 ▼ 0.49% TSX 35,305 ▲ 0.30% VIX 16.31 ▲ 8.52% USD/CAD1.41▼ 0.20% US10Y 4.5690 ▲ 0.66% IBOV 177,866 ▲ 2.97% IPSA 11,057 ▲ 0.28% IPC MEX 66,496 ▲ 0.59% MERVAL 3,280,224 ▲ 2.43% COLCAP 2,307.67 ▲ 0.65% BVL PERÚ 56,194.27 ▲ 1.29% USD/BRL 5.11 ▲ 0.02% USD/MXN 17.48 ▲ 0.05% USD/CLP 923.90 ▼ 0.41% USD/COP 3,237 ▼ 0.27% USD/PEN 3.41 ▲ 0.51% USD/ARS 1,487 ▼ 0.03% USD/UYU 40.22 ▲ 1.37% USD/PYG 6,055 ▲ 1.45% USD/BOB 10.14 ▲ 4.01% USD/DOP 58.65 ▲ 0.29% USD/CRC 448.82 ▲ 1.41% USD/GTQ 7.63 ▲ 2.31% USD/HNL 26.72 ▲ 0.09% USD/NIO 36.62 — 0.00% USD/VES 719.54 ▼ 0.13% USD/PAB 1.00 — 0.00% USD/BZD 2.00 — 0.00% USD/JMD 158.09 ▲ 0.40% USD/TTD 6.75 ▲ 1.44% EUR/BRL 5.84 ▲ 0.30% BRENT 78.62 ▲ 3.43% WTI 73.88 ▲ 3.46% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.28 ▲ 0.68% GOLD 4,072 ▼ 0.78% SILVER 58.84 ▼ 1.63% SOY 1,198 ▲ 0.10% CORN 466.00 ▲ 6.39% WHEAT 637.50 ▲ 0.87% COFFEE 327.90 ▼ 4.40% SUGAR 14.77 ▼ 0.74% ORANGE JUICE 143.25 ▼ 4.44% COTTON 81.35 ▲ 1.79% COCOA 5,573 ▼ 5.85% BEEF 230.55 ▼ 2.00% CATTLE 354.60 ▼ 0.44% LITHIUM 72.32 ▼ 0.69% PETR4 39.65 ▲ 1.12% VALE3 74.18 ▲ 1.41% ITUB4 44.30 ▲ 4.02% BBDC4 18.86 ▲ 4.78% ABEV3 15.82 ▲ 0.64% BBAS3 20.58 ▲ 2.90% B3SA3 15.42 ▲ 4.26% WEGE3 46.51 ▲ 1.68% PRIO3 55.45 ▼ 0.29% SUZB3 41.55 ▲ 1.27% RENT3 41.10 ▲ 4.31% AZZA3 19.10 ▲ 3.47% CSAN3 4.07 ▲ 5.44% RAIZ4 0.35 ▼ 5.41% PCAR3 2.73 ▼ 1.09% GMAT3 3.97 ▲ 1.02% PSSA3 54.97 ▲ 3.04% CVCB3 1.25 — 0.00% POSI3 3.97 ▲ 3.12% SLCE3 14.02 ▲ 1.67% NATU3 8.68 ▲ 2.60% BRKM5 6.63 ▲ 4.25% RANI3 8.01 ▲ 1.91% CSNA3 5.18 ▲ 7.92% CMIN3 5.23 ▲ 8.28% USIM5 8.45 ▲ 1.20% GGBR4 23.01 ▲ 2.36% ENEV3 27.55 ▲ 5.15% CPFE3 47.87 ▲ 3.41% CMIG4 11.38 ▲ 2.71% EQTL3 40.91 ▲ 3.54% LREN3 14.62 ▲ 3.32% VIVT3 35.75 ▲ 3.62% RAIL3 14.36 ▲ 4.44% KLABIN 17.54 ▲ 0.80% RAIA DROGASIL 18.77 ▲ 3.53% RDOR3 36.02 ▲ 2.48% HAPV3 10.60 ▲ 5.26% FLRY3 16.42 ▲ 4.25% SMTO3 16.37 ▲ 1.99% UGPA3 30.71 ▲ 2.03% VBBR3 33.00 ▲ 2.80% BBSE3 40.35 ▲ 2.72% BPAC11 58.73 ▲ 5.48% CURY3 34.21 ▲ 4.62% AERI3 2.09 ▲ 1.46% VIVARA 23.53 ▲ 4.21% COMPASS 25.50 ▲ 3.32% VAMOS 3.06 ▲ 3.38% SANB11 27.62 ▲ 5.22% ASAI3 8.87 ▲ 4.85% SBSP3 31.11 ▲ 3.70% WALMEX 49.31 ▲ 0.59% GMEXICO 198.62 ▲ 1.68% FEMSA 223.20 ▲ 0.37% CEMEX 21.82 ▲ 0.51% GFNORTE 186.51 ▲ 0.63% BIMBO 56.06 ▲ 0.23% TELEVISA 9.74 ▲ 2.63% AMX 22.70 ▲ 0.27% GAP 412.01 ▼ 0.41% ASUR 285.12 ▲ 0.53% OMA 235.73 ▼ 0.95% KOF 182.08 ▲ 0.65% GRUMA 282.99 ▲ 0.14% KIMBER 38.13 ▼ 0.81% SQM-B 67,750 ▼ 1.95% COPEC 6,139 ▲ 1.98% BSANTANDER 79.00 ▲ 1.94% FALABELLA 5,905 ▲ 0.92% ENELAM 85.40 ▲ 1.47% CENCOSUD 2,045 ▼ 0.55% CMPC 1,109 ▲ 1.32% BANCO CHILE 188.88 ▲ 1.01% LATAM AIR 26.26 ▼ 0.53% YPF 74,450 ▼ 1.75% GGAL 8,350 ▲ 5.96% PAMPA 5,185 ▼ 0.38% TXAR 671.00 ▲ 0.98% ALUAR 978.00 ▲ 0.98% TGS 9,610 ▲ 3.22% CEPU 2,405 ▲ 3.89% MIRGOR 17,375 ▲ 1.02% COME 45.90 ▲ 1.06% LOMA NEGRA 3,583 ▲ 2.43% BYMA 314.00 ▲ 1.37% TELECOM ARG 4,248 ▲ 3.09% ECOPETROL 15.59 ▲ 1.27% BANCOLOMBIA 82.95 ▲ 2.50% GRUPO AVAL 5.08 ▲ 1.20% CREDICORP 400.81 ▲ 2.27% SOUTHERN COPPER 175.83 ▲ 0.80% BUENAVENTURA 30.00 ▲ 1.52% MERCADOLIBRE 1,852 ▲ 2.46% NUBANK 13.76 ▲ 0.66% XP 16.92 ▲ 3.11% PAGSEGURO 9.25 ▲ 2.78% STONE 11.21 ▲ 2.28% GLOBANT 29.96 ▼ 4.25% TECNOGLASS 43.90 ▲ 1.76% GAP AIRPORT 235.64 ▲ 0.50% ASUR 285.12 ▲ 0.53% OMA AIRPORT 108.09 ▼ 0.22% AMX ADR 26.04 ▲ 0.77% FEMSA ADR 127.70 ▲ 0.55% CEMEX ADR 12.48 ▲ 0.89% PETROBRAS ADR 17.32 ▲ 1.70% VALE ADR 14.46 ▲ 1.69% ITAU ADR 8.62 ▲ 4.11% SANTANDER BR 5.39 ▲ 4.86% AMBEV ADR 3.07 ▲ 0.99% CSN 1.01 ▲ 5.79% GERDAU 4.50 ▲ 2.04% LATAM ADR 56.45 ▼ 1.03% BTC 62,947 ▼ 1.27% ETH 1,780 ▼ 1.44% SOL 76.33 ▼ 0.71% XRP 1.08 ▼ 0.67% BNB 569.57 ▼ 0.76% ADA 0.16 ▼ 1.39% DOGE 0.07 ▼ 0.46% AVAX 6.62 ▲ 3.41% LINK 7.94 ▼ 0.70% DOT 0.84 ▼ 0.97% LTC 43.63 ▼ 0.77% BCH 238.55 ▼ 0.59% TRX 0.33 ▼ 1.18% XLM 0.18 ▼ 0.85% HBAR 0.07 ▼ 0.94% NEAR 1.92 ▲ 1.50% ATOM 1.55 ▼ 1.16% AAVE 96.42 ▼ 0.66% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 84.60 ▲ 0.88% EMBRAER ADR 66.01 ▲ 0.72% JBS 11.91 ▲ 1.53% JBS BDR 60.78 ▲ 1.22% MBRF3 15.55 ▲ 0.91% MBRFY 2.97 ▼ 1.00% INTER 5.82 ▲ 1.93% EGX 52,569 ▲ 0.60% USD/ZAR 16.35 ▲ 0.03% USD/NGN 1,376 — 0.00% NIKKEI 67,243 ▼ 1.92% CSI300 4,695 ▼ 1.79% HSI 24,214 ▲ 0.16% NIFTY 24,211 ▲ 0.02% KOSPI 6,807 ▼ 8.95% JCI 6,038 ▲ 1.92% USD/JPY 162.09 ▲ 0.26% USD/CNY 6.7655 ▼ 0.02% DAX 25,106 ▲ 0.16% CAC 8,345 ▲ 0.07% FTSE 10,486 ▼ 0.11% MIB 52,765 ▲ 0.29% IBEX 19,408 ▲ 0.12% STOXX 640.62 ▼ 0.07% EUR/USD 1.1432 ▲ 0.11% GBP/USD 1.3392 ▼ 0.04% SPX 7,575 ▲ 0.42% DJI 52,637 ▲ 0.29% NDX 29,825 ▲ 0.33% RUT 2,978 ▼ 0.49% TSX 35,305 ▲ 0.30% VIX 16.31 ▲ 8.52% USD/CAD 1.4129 ▼ 0.16% US10Y 4.5690 ▲ 0.66%
since 2009
Monday, July 13, 2026

How Brazil’s Pix Became a Target of US Financial Power

By · July 13, 2026 · 5 min read

Daily Brief

The morning intel from across Latin America. Free.

By subscribing you agree to our privacy policy. We never share your email.

Markets

Key Facts

The target. Brazil’s Pix payment system, run by the central bank, has been named in a US trade case as a barrier to American firms.

The deadline. Washington faces a July 15 statutory deadline to act on a proposed 25 percent tariff on Brazilian goods.

The second track. A June 5 US terrorist designation of two Brazilian crime groups adds sanctions exposure to payment flows that touch Pix.

The reach. Pix processes most digital payments in Brazil, making it central infrastructure rather than one product among many.

The lever. Any pullback by US banks would raise the cost of dollar clearing for Brazilian lenders, tightening financial conditions.

Brazil’s Pix payment system, a free instant-transfer rail used by almost everyone in the country, has become an unlikely pressure point in a widening squeeze from Washington on Brazilian trade and finance.

How Brazil’s Pix Became a Target of US Financial Power. (Photo internet reproduction)
RT
Ask Rio Times
Latin American markets, currencies and companies.
Open the full Ask Rio Times →

The immediate flashpoint is a tariff clock. The United States faces a July 15 deadline to decide whether to impose a twenty-five percent duty on Brazilian goods, following a trade investigation that names Pix directly.

For a reader abroad, the striking part is what is being targeted. This is not a subsidy or a tariff, but a piece of public financial plumbing.

One-stop reference
Company Intelligence
Every listed company in Latin America — financials, ownership and structure for 1,450+ companies across 26 exchanges, in one place.
Browse the directory →

Why the Pix payment system is in Washington’s sights

The US trade office argues that Pix favours a national champion over American providers of card and electronic-payment services. Card companies have complained for years that a free, state-run rail undercuts them.

Critics of the move call it a stretch. Pix was built by Brazil’s central bank to bring millions of unbanked people into the financial system, they note, not as a weapon against foreign firms.

The case is one of six charges in the trade probe, alongside ethanol access, intellectual property and deforestation. But it is the one that touches the machinery of Brazilian finance most directly.

The politics are hard to miss. The pressure has built as President Trump has aligned himself with the family of Brazil’s jailed former president, giving the trade fight an unmistakable partisan edge.

How the Pix payment system fight became about financial power

The sharper risk runs through a second American action. On June 5 the United States designated two Brazilian crime groups as foreign terrorist organisations, a label that carries heavy sanctions consequences.

Here is the catch. Criminal money moves through the same payment infrastructure as ordinary commerce, so a hard sanctions line could reach any counterparty whose flows pass through Pix.

That is how a payment rail becomes a lever. As one Washington institute has argued, US sanctions law works by creating exposure that private banks price in and pass on, without Washington needing to spell anything out.

The practical threat is to dollar clearing. Any serious pullback by US banks from Brazilian counterparties would raise the cost of moving dollars, tightening financial conditions across the economy.

The timing is awkward for Brazil. Its public finances are already strained and interest rates are high, so an external squeeze on the banking system lands at a delicate moment.

There is a longer thread too. Brazil has promoted Pix as a model abroad and as a possible building block for payment networks outside the dollar, which helps explain why it has drawn such attention.

The scale is part of what makes it sensitive. Pix has grown into the backbone of everyday Brazilian commerce, used from street stalls to large firms, so any forced change would ripple through the whole economy.

Brazil’s government has refused to treat the trade instrument as legitimate, arguing such unilateral measures sit outside world trade rules. It skipped the Washington hearings, saying they were meant for the private sector.

Business groups on both sides have tried to defuse the standoff. Brazilian and American industry lobbies jointly proposed a two-stage deal, settling the immediate irritants first and leaving the harder digital-payment question for later talks.

Whatever Washington decides, the episode is a lesson in modern financial power. A domestic payment rail, built for inclusion at home, can become a bargaining chip once it touches the reach of the dollar.

What is the Pix payment system?

Pix is an instant-payment rail run by Brazil’s central bank that lets people and businesses transfer money for free in seconds. Launched in 2020, it now handles most digital payments in the country and has brought many previously unbanked Brazilians into the financial system.

Why is the United States targeting the Pix payment system?

A US trade investigation says Pix unfairly favours a national champion over American card and electronic-payment firms, and it is one of six Brazilian practices under review. Washington faces a July 15 deadline to decide on a proposed twenty-five percent tariff on Brazilian goods.

How could the Pix payment system dispute affect Brazil’s economy?

Beyond tariffs, a US terrorist designation of Brazilian crime groups creates sanctions exposure for payment flows that touch Pix. If American banks pulled back, the cost of dollar clearing for Brazilian lenders would rise, tightening financial conditions at an already delicate moment.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is the United States targeting Brazil's Pix payment system in a trade case?

The US trade office argues that Pix, a free state-run payment rail, favours a national champion over American providers of card and electronic-payment services. Card companies have complained that a free, government-operated system undercuts them competitively.

What is the July 15 deadline and what could it mean for Brazil?

The United States faces a July 15 statutory deadline to decide whether to impose a twenty-five percent tariff on Brazilian goods, following a trade investigation that names Pix directly. This deadline makes the Pix dispute an immediate flashpoint in the broader trade relationship between the two countries.

How could US pressure on Pix affect Brazil's financial system?

Because Pix processes most digital payments in Brazil, it functions as central infrastructure rather than one product among many. Any pullback by US banks would raise the cost of dollar clearing for Brazilian lenders, which would tighten financial conditions more broadly across the country.

Connected Coverage

Brazil US Tariffs: CNI and AmCham Propose Two-Stage Deal

Brazil’s Industry Lobby Has Six Days to Stop a 25% US Tariff

BRICS Countries 2026: 11 Members, 10 Partners Explained

Read More from The Rio Times

The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map

Rotate for Best Experience

This report is optimized for landscape viewing. Rotate your phone for the full experience.