Brazil Closes Fintech Loophole After Laundering Scandal Exposes Billions In Hidden Cash
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's finance minister Fernando Haddad said the Federal Revenue Service will now treat fintechs as banks for tax reporting.
The rule takes effect after investigators revealed that organized crime used payment firms and investment funds to wash billions of reais through the fuel trade.
Receita Federal confirmed that fintechs must join the e-Financeira system, which requires detailed reporting of balances and transactions. Until now, only traditional banks had this obligation.
Authorities stress the measure does not tax digital payments like Pix, but instead closes a gap that allowed criminals to move large sums with little oversight.
The immediate trigger was the“Carbono Oculto” operation, one of the largest financial raids in recent years. Receita's report shows that around 1,000 gas stations moved R$52 billion from 2020 to 2024 while paying almost no tax .
Another 140 ghost stations generated R$2 billion in fake invoices. A payment fintech worked as a parallel bank, channeling more than R$46 billion in the same period, including 10,900 cash deposits worth R$61 million.
Investigators also found more than 40 investment funds with R$30 billion in assets used to hide real ownership. These funds controlled a port terminal, four ethanol plants, 1,600 fuel trucks, and more than 100 properties.
The operation carried out more than 400 search and seizure orders and froze R$3.2 billion in assets. Behind the crackdown lies a broader policy push.
Haddad linked the move to a Senate bill targeting the devedor contumaz-companies set up to avoid taxes by constantly opening and shutting down. The bill aims to classify repeat offenders and reward compliant firms, a step officials argue is vital to restore fair competition.
The story behind the story is simple: fintechs became the weak link in Brazil 's financial chain. Criminal groups exploited their lighter regulation to push massive sums into the formal economy.
The new rules close that gap, give tax authorities equal visibility across financial institutions, and signal a tougher stance against systematic tax evasion.
For investors and businesses, the message is clear. Brazil will no longer allow shadow networks to use innovative payment firms or funds to hide profits.
By treating fintechs like banks, the government seeks to protect honest competition while cutting off a crucial financial channel for organized crime.
The rule takes effect after investigators revealed that organized crime used payment firms and investment funds to wash billions of reais through the fuel trade.
Receita Federal confirmed that fintechs must join the e-Financeira system, which requires detailed reporting of balances and transactions. Until now, only traditional banks had this obligation.
Authorities stress the measure does not tax digital payments like Pix, but instead closes a gap that allowed criminals to move large sums with little oversight.
The immediate trigger was the“Carbono Oculto” operation, one of the largest financial raids in recent years. Receita's report shows that around 1,000 gas stations moved R$52 billion from 2020 to 2024 while paying almost no tax .
Another 140 ghost stations generated R$2 billion in fake invoices. A payment fintech worked as a parallel bank, channeling more than R$46 billion in the same period, including 10,900 cash deposits worth R$61 million.
Investigators also found more than 40 investment funds with R$30 billion in assets used to hide real ownership. These funds controlled a port terminal, four ethanol plants, 1,600 fuel trucks, and more than 100 properties.
The operation carried out more than 400 search and seizure orders and froze R$3.2 billion in assets. Behind the crackdown lies a broader policy push.
Haddad linked the move to a Senate bill targeting the devedor contumaz-companies set up to avoid taxes by constantly opening and shutting down. The bill aims to classify repeat offenders and reward compliant firms, a step officials argue is vital to restore fair competition.
The story behind the story is simple: fintechs became the weak link in Brazil 's financial chain. Criminal groups exploited their lighter regulation to push massive sums into the formal economy.
The new rules close that gap, give tax authorities equal visibility across financial institutions, and signal a tougher stance against systematic tax evasion.
For investors and businesses, the message is clear. Brazil will no longer allow shadow networks to use innovative payment firms or funds to hide profits.
By treating fintechs like banks, the government seeks to protect honest competition while cutting off a crucial financial channel for organized crime.

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