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Dollar's Brief Pause Masks Persistent Downtrend Against Brazilian Real
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) The U.S. dollar's modest uptick against the Brazilian real over the last 24 hours does not signal a shift in market direction. Official trading data shows the dollar closing at 5.5739 reais on June 11, 2025, after a minor rise that interrupted several days of steady declines.
This movement, however, appears as a short-lived reaction rather than a meaningful reversal, according to the most widely used technical indicators.
The daily chart for USD/BRL reveals the dollar trading well below all major moving averages, including the 50-day, 100-day, and 200-day lines. The price also sits far beneath the Ichimoku cloud, a sign that the broader trend remains decisively bearish.
The slight upward move seen yesterday failed to break any significant resistance and looks more like a pause in a persistent downtrend than the start of a recovery.
The Bollinger Bands on the daily chart show the price hugging the lower band, which often signals a market that is oversold but not yet ready to reverse.
On the four-hour chart, the picture is similar. The dollar's bounce pierced the 9-period moving average but immediately met resistance at the 20-period moving average, which blocked further gains.
The price remains below the cloud and all other key averages, reinforcing the view that downward pressure dominates. No surge in trading volume accompanied the brief uptick, suggesting little conviction among buyers.
Technical Outlook
Fundamental factors continue to weigh on the real but have not changed the technical outlook. Brazil's inflation rate slowed more than expected in May, reaching 0.26% for the month and 5.32% year-on-year.
The central bank's high Selic rate of 14.75% remains in place to anchor expectations, while fiscal policy uncertainty persists as the government seeks new revenue sources.
Internationally, commodity prices softened, and global risk sentiment remains cautious due to ongoing trade policy uncertainty. Support for the USD/BRL pair stands near 5.54, with resistance around 5.64.
The market's inability to break above these levels underscores the lack of momentum for a sustained dollar rally. The narrowing Ichimoku cloud and persistent position below all moving averages on both daily and four-hour charts signal that the path of least resistance remains downward.
In summary, the dollar's brief rise against the real reflects a technical pause rather than a change in trend. The dominant signals from moving averages, Ichimoku cloud, and price action point to continued pressure on the dollar.
Unless fundamentals shift sharply or technical barriers break, the real's recent strength looks set to persist in the near term.
This movement, however, appears as a short-lived reaction rather than a meaningful reversal, according to the most widely used technical indicators.
The daily chart for USD/BRL reveals the dollar trading well below all major moving averages, including the 50-day, 100-day, and 200-day lines. The price also sits far beneath the Ichimoku cloud, a sign that the broader trend remains decisively bearish.
The slight upward move seen yesterday failed to break any significant resistance and looks more like a pause in a persistent downtrend than the start of a recovery.
The Bollinger Bands on the daily chart show the price hugging the lower band, which often signals a market that is oversold but not yet ready to reverse.
On the four-hour chart, the picture is similar. The dollar's bounce pierced the 9-period moving average but immediately met resistance at the 20-period moving average, which blocked further gains.
The price remains below the cloud and all other key averages, reinforcing the view that downward pressure dominates. No surge in trading volume accompanied the brief uptick, suggesting little conviction among buyers.
Technical Outlook
Fundamental factors continue to weigh on the real but have not changed the technical outlook. Brazil's inflation rate slowed more than expected in May, reaching 0.26% for the month and 5.32% year-on-year.
The central bank's high Selic rate of 14.75% remains in place to anchor expectations, while fiscal policy uncertainty persists as the government seeks new revenue sources.
Internationally, commodity prices softened, and global risk sentiment remains cautious due to ongoing trade policy uncertainty. Support for the USD/BRL pair stands near 5.54, with resistance around 5.64.
The market's inability to break above these levels underscores the lack of momentum for a sustained dollar rally. The narrowing Ichimoku cloud and persistent position below all moving averages on both daily and four-hour charts signal that the path of least resistance remains downward.
In summary, the dollar's brief rise against the real reflects a technical pause rather than a change in trend. The dominant signals from moving averages, Ichimoku cloud, and price action point to continued pressure on the dollar.
Unless fundamentals shift sharply or technical barriers break, the real's recent strength looks set to persist in the near term.

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