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Brazil's Real Slips As U.S. Data Shock And Shutdown Collide With Brasília's Fiscal Jitters
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) USD/BRL hovered around 5.33 on Thursday morning after closing at 5.3293, a small move that masks a bigger story.
Globally, the dollar softened midweek as the U.S. private-sector jobs report (ADP) unexpectedly showed a 32,000 job loss in September versus forecasts for a 50,000 gain.
At the same time, Washington's government shutdown began, delaying many official economic releases-including the all-important nonfarm payrolls-just as investors try to gauge the Federal Reserve 's next step.
That one-two punch matters for Brazil for a simple reason: when U.S. growth looks softer and the Fed is seen cutting rates sooner, the global dollar usually weakens. Indeed, the dollar index drifted in the high-97s. But the real didn't fully benefit.
At home, lawmakers are debating tax changes, including a proposal to exempt income tax for earners up to R$5,000 ($943) per month.
Any sign that fiscal numbers could widen or targets slip tends to make investors demand a higher premium to hold Brazilian assets-dulling the usual tailwind from a softer global dollar.
The result is a push-and-pull market. On one side: growing bets that the Fed will deliver another rate cut at its October 29 meeting, a support for emerging-market currencies.
On the other: uncertainty from the U.S. data blackout and Brazil's fiscal debate, which keeps traders cautious about extending long-real positions.
Technical signals echo the stalemate. On the daily chart, USD/BRL trades below its falling 200-day average near 5.45, a sign that dollar rallies against the real have struggled to stick. Momentum is neutral, with RSI in the low-40s.
The four-hour chart looks slightly firmer for the dollar-RSI around the low-50s and a tentative MACD turn-but price still sits beneath the 200-period average near 5.39. Resistance layers at 5.35, 5.39, and 5.45; support is 5.31/5.30 and then 5.28.
The story behind the story is clarity. If the shutdown drags and official data stay dark, global nerves rise and the real can underperform despite a softer dollar.
If Brasília delivers a cleaner, credible fiscal path while the Fed turns more openly dovish, USD/BRL has room to drift back toward the lower end of the 5.30–5.28 range.
Globally, the dollar softened midweek as the U.S. private-sector jobs report (ADP) unexpectedly showed a 32,000 job loss in September versus forecasts for a 50,000 gain.
At the same time, Washington's government shutdown began, delaying many official economic releases-including the all-important nonfarm payrolls-just as investors try to gauge the Federal Reserve 's next step.
That one-two punch matters for Brazil for a simple reason: when U.S. growth looks softer and the Fed is seen cutting rates sooner, the global dollar usually weakens. Indeed, the dollar index drifted in the high-97s. But the real didn't fully benefit.
At home, lawmakers are debating tax changes, including a proposal to exempt income tax for earners up to R$5,000 ($943) per month.
Any sign that fiscal numbers could widen or targets slip tends to make investors demand a higher premium to hold Brazilian assets-dulling the usual tailwind from a softer global dollar.
The result is a push-and-pull market. On one side: growing bets that the Fed will deliver another rate cut at its October 29 meeting, a support for emerging-market currencies.
On the other: uncertainty from the U.S. data blackout and Brazil's fiscal debate, which keeps traders cautious about extending long-real positions.
Technical signals echo the stalemate. On the daily chart, USD/BRL trades below its falling 200-day average near 5.45, a sign that dollar rallies against the real have struggled to stick. Momentum is neutral, with RSI in the low-40s.
The four-hour chart looks slightly firmer for the dollar-RSI around the low-50s and a tentative MACD turn-but price still sits beneath the 200-period average near 5.39. Resistance layers at 5.35, 5.39, and 5.45; support is 5.31/5.30 and then 5.28.
The story behind the story is clarity. If the shutdown drags and official data stay dark, global nerves rise and the real can underperform despite a softer dollar.
If Brasília delivers a cleaner, credible fiscal path while the Fed turns more openly dovish, USD/BRL has room to drift back toward the lower end of the 5.30–5.28 range.

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