Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Real Gains Ground As U.S. Labor Data Triggers Dollar Slide Amid Rate Cut Bets


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) The Brazilian real opened stronger on September 6, 2025, following official employment figures from the United States that fell short of expectations.

Around 5.415 reais exchanged for one U.S. dollar, as seen on clear market data reflected in the latest ICE and TradingView composite charts.

All recent trading sessions have reinforced this trajectory. The real has consolidated gains driven by hard numbers, not headline noise.

U.S. economic figures showed only 22,000 new jobs created in August against a consensus expectation of 75,000.

The unemployment rate registered at 4.3 percent, exactly as forecasted by government releases.

These incontrovertible facts led investors to reconsider their positions, with betting shifting rapidly toward a September U.S. Federal Reserve rate cut.

Analysts factored in either a 25 or even 50 basis-point reduction. As that expectation circulated, the DXY dollar index dropped by half a percentage point late on September 5.



The real's move found solid footing in domestic data as well. Brazil's Selic interest rate remains stable at 15 percent, a figure well-documented by central bank reports and monetary policy statements.

This rate, among the highest globally, continues to attract foreign capital into Brazilian securities and bonds.
Real Gains Ground as U.S. Labor Data Triggers Dollar Slide Amid Rate Cut Bets
The country's trade balance speaks for itself, showing a surplus over $6.1 billion for August, significantly higher than the same period last year.

Producer price data from Brazil also revealed a 0.3 percent drop, making for six consecutive months of sliding costs, directly sourced from IBGE.

Brazil's internal dynamics showed some friction, with July's industrial output down 0.2 percent, yet second-quarter GDP stayed positive, rising 0.4 percent.

Together, these macroeconomic indicators painted a nuanced, fact-based landscape for any trader or investor with an eye for detail.

Technical analysis of intraday (4-hour) and daily charts confirmed that the dollar-real pair stayed within tightly defined boundaries between 5.40 and 5.50 for weeks.

Indicators such as the RSI hovered around 42–48 on the four-hour chart, signaling short-term oversold conditions, while the daily MACD showed persistent downward momentum.

Bollinger Bands squeezed, indicating contraction in volatility, and key moving averages pointed to a short-term downward bias.

The Global Liquidity Index NDQ, the yellow line on the charts, oscillated without strong conviction, failing to signal a clear surge in market liquidity.

Official sources, from government labor reports to central bank statements and ICE foreign exchange data, all anchor these figures.

No rumors, no headlines, and no speculative chatter led decision-making on the Brazilian real's valuation.

Only official data and visible, chart-based evidence determined this market move. The currency story today follows real facts, not flights of fancy.

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