Brazilian Real Extends Rally

2026-05-06 13:51 By Anna Fedec 1 min. read

The Brazilian real strenghten to 4.91 per USD, its strongest level in more than two years, as investors continued to favor Brazilian assets amid high domestic interest rates and strong foreign inflows.

The Central Bank of Brazil maintained a cautious tone after recent monetary easing, signaling that persistent global uncertainty and tighter international financial conditions could limit the pace of future rate cuts.

Support for the Brazilian currency also came from resilient exports of oil, iron ore, soybeans, coffee, and beef, which continued to generate strong trade surpluses and steady dollar inflows.

Meanwhile, expectations that the US Federal Reserve could gradually ease policy later this year, reinforced by falling oil prices, weakened the dollar broadly.

Oil prices declined after reports that the White House was nearing a preliminary agreement with Iran aimed at ending the conflict and reopening the door to broader nuclear negotiations.



News Stream
Brazilian Real Extends Rally
The Brazilian real strenghten to 4.91 per USD, its strongest level in more than two years, as investors continued to favor Brazilian assets amid high domestic interest rates and strong foreign inflows. The Central Bank of Brazil maintained a cautious tone after recent monetary easing, signaling that persistent global uncertainty and tighter international financial conditions could limit the pace of future rate cuts. Support for the Brazilian currency also came from resilient exports of oil, iron ore, soybeans, coffee, and beef, which continued to generate strong trade surpluses and steady dollar inflows. Meanwhile, expectations that the US Federal Reserve could gradually ease policy later this year, reinforced by falling oil prices, weakened the dollar broadly. Oil prices declined after reports that the White House was nearing a preliminary agreement with Iran aimed at ending the conflict and reopening the door to broader nuclear negotiations.
2026-05-06
Brazilian Real Holds Near Two-Year High
The Brazilian real held steady at 4.98 per USD, near a two-year high, as markets digested the central bank’s decision to cut the Selic rate alongside still-tight labor market conditions. The Central Bank of Brazil lowered its benchmark rate to 14.50%, citing an uncertain external backdrop shaped by Middle East tensions and tighter global financial conditions. The real found support as the central bank signaled caution on further easing. This stance was reinforced by labor data showing the unemployment rate rose to 6.1% in the rolling quarter ending March from 5.8%, still the lowest for the period since 2012.
2026-04-30
Brazilian Real Strengthens Ahead of Selic Decision
The Brazilian real strengthened to 4.98 per USD, near their highest level in two years, amid the outlook of higher foreign exchange inflows and restrictive monetary policy by the Central Bank of Brazil. The ongoing conflict between Iran and the US has suspended oil flows from the Middle East, lifting global energy prices and increasing foreign exchange inflows for alternative energy exporters such as Brazil. The higher energy prices also caused headline inflation to rise to 4.4% in the first half of April, approaching the central bank's upper threshold of 4.5%. A small majority of the market expects the BCB to deliver a 25bps rate cut this week, although threats of unanchored inflation expectations flagged by the central bank supported bets of a hold. Still, the elevated Selic rate of 14.75% maintained carry trade demand that supported the real.
2026-04-28