Brazilian Real Strengthens on Trade Outlook
2025-10-20 15:24
By
Felipe Alarcon
1 min. read
The Brazilian real strengthened past 5.4 per US dollar, rebounding further from the two-month low of R$5.52 on October 10th driven primarily by an easing of the US–China trade risk premium, alongside a broadly subdued dollar and firmer external demand that improve near-term export prospects.
Markets have repriced a lower tariff tail risk after signs of a thaw in bilateral rhetoric and preparatory talks, reducing the likelihood of large trade shocks to commodity flows that underpin Brazil’s current account.
At the same time the dollar has stayed subdued amid the US government shutdown and rising odds of Fed rate cuts, trimming dollar funding costs and encouraging cross-border flows into higher-yielding Brazil.
Elevated real interest rates relative to peers preserve carry appeal, while stronger Chinese activity and firmer commodity prices bolster expected export receipts.