Brazilian Real Rebounds from 1-Month Low
2025-11-25 14:10
By
Felipe Alarcon
1 min. read
The Brazilian real strengthened to about 5.36 per US dollar, recovering from one-month lows of 5.40 on November 21st as a more dovish US Fed outlook outweighed local policy expectations.
A rapid repricing of US policy after Fed comments lifted the odds of a December cut to roughly 80% and that lower dollar tone directly eased pressure on the real, while Brazil’s wide interest rate cushion with the Selic at 15% continues to draw carry oriented capital.
Domestic indicators reinforced inflow dynamics with the Focus Bulletin trimming the 2025 IPCA to 4.45% and October foreign direct investment of about US$10.94bn, the highest since 2022.
Central bank president Galípolo has emphasised that policy remains restrictive and that any easing would be gradual and likely in early 2026, a stance that reassures investors the interest rate premium will not vanish abruptly and supports the currency’s rebound.