Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Foreign Capital Floods Brazilian Markets As Carry Trade Trumps Fiscal Risks In January Surge


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) B3, Brazil's stock exchange, reported foreign investors injected R$2.5 billion ($430 million) into secondary markets on January 30, 2025, capping a volatile month that saw net inflows reach R$6.6 billion.

The surge reversed early January's R$3.4 billion foreign exodus and outpaced 2024's record R$32.1 billion annual outflow, hinting at tentative confidence in Latin America's largest Economy despite lingering fiscal risks.

A pivotal R$9.1 billion block trade on January 16–17 drove the turnaround. Cosan SA sold its 4% stake in mining giant Vale to reduce debt, attracting R$6.5 billion in foreign capital within hours.

The deal pushed B3's daily liquidity to R$24.6 billion, its highest level in five years. It also transformed January's foreign balance from a R$5.8 billion deficit to a R$3.6 billion surplus overnight.

Global investors targeted Brazil's 13.25% benchmark interest rate, the world's highest real yield. This occurred despite concerns over rising public debt and stalled reforms.



Domestic institutional investors remained wary, withdrawing R$1.4 billion on January 30 alone. This extended their 12-month capital flight to R$35.7 billion.
Navigating Volatility and Political Uncertainty
Retail traders showed resilience, absorbing R$1.6 billion in daily outflows while maintaining a R$309.3 million net inflow for the month. The Ibovespa index rose 4.86% in January, led by financial stocks and real estate trusts, though commodity exporters underperformed amid weaker global demand.

Analysts caution the rebound remains fragile. Goldman Sachs noted stalled tax reforms and a widening 2025 deficit could undermine momentum, calling the Vale transaction“a one-off, not a structural shift.”

Foreign ownership of B3-listed equities now stands at 14%, half its 2018 peak. Local pension funds and retail investors are increasingly dominating trading.

January's R$6.6 billion foreign surplus marks Brazil's first net inflow since 2022. However, it falls short of the R$9.8 billion monthly average during 2021's commodity-driven boom.

With the MSCI Brazil index up 12.3% this year, investors face a dilemma: chase high yields or hedge against political and fiscal uncertainty. For now, pragmatism outweighs ideology as capital flows follow opportunity, not dogma.

MENAFN03022025007421016031ID1109163194


Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.