Brazilian Real Pulling Back From Mid-2024 Highs
2026-02-02 18:30
By
Felipe Alarcon
1 min. read
The Brazilian real weakened past 5.26 per US dollar, pulling back from its strongest levels since May 2024 as renewed US dollar strength and shifting global rate dynamics reduced support for high carry currencies.
Externally, the move reflects the dollar’s rebound after January’s decline, driven by firmer US activity data and the nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve chair, which reinforced expectations of tighter liquidity conditions and a more disciplined balance sheet approach, lifting US yields and increasing the opportunity cost of holding BRL.
Domestically, while Copom has maintained the Selic at a restrictive 15%, policymakers have reiterated that any future easing will remain conditional on sustained disinflation and fiscal discipline, limiting expectations for additional upside from Brazil’s already well priced real yield advantage and offering little fresh support to the currency.