Rio de Janeiro Daily Brief for Tuesday, June 16, 2026
Decision day is almost here. The central bank’s rate-setting committee meets today and tomorrow, with the call on interest rates due tomorrow evening.
It is a genuinely open decision. A small cut is the favourite, but inflation forecasts have crept higher, and a hold is no longer off the table.
The weather matches the mood. At 21°C with a 60% chance of rain, today is the wettest of the week — one to keep indoors and well planned.
Brighter news ahead, though. The skies clear from Thursday, and Friday — when Brazil face Haiti — looks warm and dry, a fine end to the week.
01
Weather & What to Wear
FOUR-DAY OUTLOOK
Today is the wet one. Rain is already about, the chance of more sits at around 60%, and the high reaches only 21°C under heavy cloud, so plan to spend much of the day under cover.
Take a proper umbrella and a light waterproof. The rain may come in bands rather than all day, but the gaps are hard to predict, so it is worth being ready whenever you step out.
The reward comes later in the week. Wednesday is drier, Thursday looks clear, and Friday turns warm at 24°C — good timing, with Brazil’s match that evening and the weekend close behind.
02
Day at a Glance
SNAPSHOT
A wet, indoor Tuesday, with the central bank front of mind.
Live Market IntelligenceBrazil — Live Market Board
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Brazil — Live Market Board
-0.63%
170,415
-0.63%
68,208
+1.84%
10,879
-0.40%
3,352,708
-0.01%
2,386.78
+1.53%
56,473.49
-0.01%
| Instrument | Last | Change | YoY | Prev. | High | Low | Volume |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IBOV | 170,415 | -0.63% | +22.38% | 171,497 | — | — | — |
| USD/BRL | 5.07 | +0.10% | -8.53% | 5.06 | 5.07 | 5.05 | — |
| SELIC | 14.50% | — | — | — | — | — | |
| PETR4 | 39.06 | -5.15% | +21.27% | 41.18 | 39.92 | 39.06 | 53,872,200 |
| VALE3 | 81.16 | +2.51% | +50.77% | 79.17 | 82.74 | 80.65 | 22,314,000 |
| ITUB4 | 40.40 | -0.49% | +12.98% | 40.60 | 41.49 | 40.32 | 25,151,900 |
| BBDC4 | 17.65 | -0.84% | +6.07% | 17.80 | 18.27 | 17.54 | 18,119,300 |
| BBAS3 | 19.39 | -0.36% | -11.78% | 19.46 | 19.97 | 19.33 | 16,406,500 |
| B3SA3 | 15.14 | -0.59% | +12.40% | 15.23 | 15.78 | 15.11 | 38,872,500 |
| ABEV3 | 16.57 | -0.24% | +21.13% | 16.61 | 16.82 | 16.56 | 19,475,300 |
| WEGE3 | 42.78 | +0.40% | +0.56% | 42.61 | 43.96 | 42.45 | 6,229,900 |
| PRIO3 | 57.10 | -6.91% | +32.24% | 61.34 | 59.01 | 56.65 | 20,111,300 |
| SUZB3 | 42.59 | +2.58% | -21.49% | 41.52 | 43.15 | 41.74 | 6,042,600 |
| RENT3 | 40.65 | -0.12% | -9.65% | 40.70 | 42.47 | 40.45 | 11,566,500 |
| AZZA3 | 17.44 | +1.45% | -58.23% | 17.19 | 17.98 | 17.20 | 2,367,500 |
| CSNA3 | 6.09 | +0.66% | -27.67% | 6.05 | 6.50 | 6.06 | 14,801,200 |
| GGBR4 | 23.36 | -2.18% | +38.72% | 23.88 | 24.55 | 23.30 | 9,789,100 |
| ENEV3 | 25.06 | +2.12% | +81.20% | 24.54 | 25.51 | 24.49 | 8,343,000 |
03
What to See & Do
TUESDAY IN RIO
A museum of tomorrow for a rainy today
A wet Tuesday is exactly the day the Museu do Amanhã was made for. It opens Tuesday to Sunday, so it sidesteps the Monday-and-Tuesday closures that catch out so many of the city’s museums, and it sits right on the revived waterfront at Praça Mauá, an easy and dry trip in on the VLT light rail.
The building alone justifies the visit. Santiago Calatrava’s great white structure reaches out over the bay like a ship’s prow, all cantilevered spines and reflecting pools, and it is one of the boldest pieces of architecture in Brazil. Inside, the science museum takes you on a journey from the origins of the cosmos to the choices facing humanity, through immersive screens, data and interactive exhibits that reward an unhurried couple of hours.
It makes a natural pairing with the MAR art museum next door, also open today, so a single trip to the port can fill a grey afternoon comfortably. Tickets are modest in price, with a free day on Tuesdays at the MAR, and the cafés around Praça Mauá give you somewhere warm to pause between the two. The whole port district was rebuilt for exactly this kind of wandering, with covered walkways and the waterfront promenade close at hand, so even the gaps between buildings stay manageable in the wet. On a day like this, it is the smartest plan in the city.
Hold the beach plans for Thursday
There is no sugar-coating it: with rain likely for much of the day, this is not one for the beach or a long walk. The smart move is to accept the wet, keep the day’s plans indoors, and shift the outdoor time to later in the week when the forecast turns decisively brighter.
If you do get a dry window and need to move, the Aterro do Flamengo and the Lagoa circuit are your best bets, both flat, paved and quick to dip into between showers. Keep any outing short, stay near cover, and do not count on the gap lasting long — June rain in Rio can return without much warning.
The good news is that Thursday looks dry and Friday warm, so a little patience pays off handsomely. Save the beach morning, the Lagoa loop or the trail up to a mirante like Dona Marta for the back half of the week, when the skies clear and the city looks its postcard best again.
A rainy day is a working day
If the weather is keeping you in, you may as well be productive, and Rio’s cafés and coworking spaces are ready for it. In Centro, near the port museums, Curto Café is a much-loved spot with excellent coffee and a pay-what-you-think spirit, ideal for an hour of focus.
Over in Botafogo, Urban Bean keeps a steady connection and a calm room, and Como Coworking nearby is the dependable choice for a full day at a proper desk. Both are well used to the midweek work crowd, and a wet Tuesday is exactly when they earn their keep.
For those working in the port for the WeWork Porto Maravilha, you are well placed for the museums too — an easy lunchtime escape to the Museu do Amanhã if you need a break from the screen and the rain.
Grandeur in the heart of the city
For a different kind of indoor afternoon, the Theatro Municipal on Cinelândia is one of Rio’s most beautiful buildings, a Belle Époque opera house modelled on the Paris Opéra and opened in 1909. Guided tours run through the day and take you behind the gilded façade into the auditorium, the marble-and-bronze foyers and the backstage workings, with the staff happy to share the building’s century of history.
It is a short walk from the port museums, so you could fold it into the same Centro outing, dodging the rain between grand interiors. Check the day’s tour times and any evening performance before you go, as the schedule shifts with rehearsals, and a wet Tuesday is a fine excuse to see the city’s cultural heart at its most ornate, far from the beach the visitors all expect.
A warm bar on a wet night
A rainy Tuesday is no night for big plans, but it is a perfect one for a snug, low-key bar. Rio’s botequins come into their own in weather like this — somewhere to settle in out of the wet with a cold beer, a few petiscos and unhurried conversation while the rain drums on the awning outside.
Botafogo and Humaitá are full of exactly the right kind of place, the sort where a midweek table is easy to come by and nobody minds you lingering over a second round. If you would rather have a roof over a livelier scene, the covered bars and live-music rooms of Lapa keep going whatever the sky is doing, with samba and choro most nights of the week.
There is no Brazil match tonight, so the mood is quiet rather than charged, with the bars trading on atmosphere rather than the football. It is a good evening to rest up, dry off and look ahead to Friday, when the weather and the football should both be a great deal brighter.
04
Getting Around
TRANSPORT
Rain always snarls Rio’s traffic, so give yourself extra time today and lean on the Metrô where you can. It stays dry, runs to schedule, and skips the worst of the wet-weather congestion on the main avenues.
For the port museums, the VLT light rail drops you right at Praça Mauá, and the Metrô to Uruguaiana or Carioca puts you within reach of Cinelândia and the Theatro Municipal. Ride apps surge the moment the rain sets in, so book a little ahead if you need one.
05
Where to Eat
LUNCH & DINNER
Lunch: Centro is the place to be at midday on a weekday. A per-kilo buffet or a sit-down prato feito near the port museums is quick, warming and good value, with Cais do Oriente a smarter choice if the rain makes you want to linger.
Dinner: Comfort food suits the night. The botequins of Botafogo and Humaitá do warming plates, and a bowl of caldo verde or a feijão-rich dish is just the thing to take the chill off a wet evening.
06
Practical Info
GOOD TO KNOW
A weekday tip worth remembering: the CCBB closes on Tuesdays, so if a free Centro exhibition is your aim, today is not the day for it. The MAR, by contrast, is free on Tuesdays, which makes it the value pick for the port.
For anyone watching the markets, the Copom announcement comes tomorrow evening after the meeting wraps. The build-up tends to keep the real and the Bovespa twitchy, and a surprise either way could move them sharply, so expect a watchful day on the desks.
07
Community & Lifestyle
FOR NEWCOMERS
Rio in the rain teaches a useful lesson: the city has far more indoors than its beach reputation suggests. The port museums, the Theatro Municipal and the Centro cultural circuit are all at their best when the weather drives you inside.
For newcomers, a wet day is a chance to explore the historic heart of the city rather than write the day off. Learn the museum closing days, keep a couple of indoor plans in your pocket, and Rio’s grey spells become some of its most rewarding.
08
Game Day
GROUP C WATCH
Three days on from the opener, the focus is firmly on Friday. Brazil’s 1-1 draw with Morocco, salvaged by Vinícius Júnior after Ismael Saibari’s early strike, left more questions than answers about Carlo Ancelotti’s side.
The Group C table sharpens the stakes. Scotland lead on three points after their 1-0 win over Haiti, with Brazil and Morocco level on one apiece, so Brazil need a clear win on Friday to take charge of their own progress.
That match against Haiti comes on Friday June 19 in Philadelphia, kicking off at 9:30 pm BRT. The big question is Neymar, who missed the opener with a calf problem and is in contention to return — a boost the team and the fans would welcome.
There is no Brazil game today, but the tournament continues elsewhere through the week, all of it building toward what has become a pivotal night for the five-time champions on Friday.
09
Business & Markets
WEEK IN FIGURES
The decision is almost here. The Ibovespa slipped 0.42% on Monday to close at 170,415 points, leaving it up about 5.8% for the year, as investors trod carefully ahead of the rate call.
The inflation picture is what makes this one tense. The latest market survey nudged the 2026 inflation forecast up to 5.30%, well above the 4.5% target ceiling, and lifted the year-end Selic expectation too — a hawkish shift that complicates any case for faster cuts.
The committee meets today and tomorrow, with the Selic currently at 14.50%. A quarter-point cut to 14.25% remains the favourite, but with inflation running hot and oil near US$100, several analysts now see a real chance the bank holds and strikes a cautious tone instead.
10
Plan Ahead
THE WEEK
11
FAQ
QUICK ANSWERS
What museums are open in Rio on a Tuesday?
The two port museums at Praça Mauá are the reliable Tuesday choices. The MAR opens Tuesday to Sunday, with free entry on Tuesdays, and the Museu do Amanhã also opens Tuesday to Sunday, making them an easy pair for a wet day.
Worth noting in the other direction: the CCBB closes on Tuesdays, so the Yoshitaka Amano show there is not an option today. The Theatro Municipal runs guided tours through the day, and the Jardim Botânico stays open, though the rain makes the indoor options the wiser bet.
When does the Copom decide the Selic rate?
The central bank’s committee meets today, Tuesday June 16, and tomorrow, with the decision announced on Wednesday evening after markets close. The benchmark Selic rate currently stands at 14.50%, following a cut in late April.
A quarter-point cut to 14.25% is the most common forecast, but it is far from settled this time. Inflation expectations for 2026 have climbed to 5.30%, well above the target ceiling, and with oil near US$100 some analysts now expect the bank to hold steady and adopt a cautious tone instead.
When does Brazil play next?
Brazil’s next World Cup match is on Friday June 19 against Haiti, in Philadelphia, kicking off at 9:30 pm BRT. It follows the 1-1 draw with Morocco in the opening match of Group C.
The game matters a great deal. Scotland top Group C on three points after beating Haiti 1-0, leaving Brazil level with Morocco on one point each, so Brazil need a win to take control of the group. Neymar, who missed the opener with a calf injury, may return for the match.
What is the weather like this week?
Tuesday is the wettest day, cloudy and around 21°C with a 60% chance of rain through the day. A proper umbrella and a light waterproof are the order of the day, and indoor plans are the sensible choice.
It improves steadily from there. Wednesday is drier near 22°C, Thursday looks clear, and Friday turns warm at 24°C with barely any rain risk — good news for Brazil’s match that evening and the weekend that follows. Save outdoor plans for the back half of the week.
Related: São Paulo Daily Brief for Tuesday · Rio de Janeiro Daily Brief for Monday