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Brazil's Real Slides Toward R$5.50 As Brasília Unveils Housing-Finance Shake-Up
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's currency weakened sharply on Friday, with the dollar up nearly 2% around R$5.48 by midday in São Paulo-even as the greenback softened against other major currencies.
The immediate backdrop at home: President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Finance Minister Fernando Haddad, and Central Bank chief Gabriel Galípolo rolled out a long-debated overhaul of how mortgages are funded.
What changed: For decades, Brazil's housing credit relied on a rule forcing banks to channel 65% of savings-account deposits into real-estate loans, with another slice locked up as compulsory reserves at the Central Bank .
The government will phase out those earmarks and reserves and move to a new framework that blends market funding with savings, aiming to provide cheaper, steadier money for mortgages.
The transition starts this year and the new model becomes fully effective in January 2027. The cap on homes eligible for the regulated SFH system rises from R$1.5 million to R$2.25 million.
During the transition, compulsory reserves tied to savings fall to 15%. The Central Bank says 80% of housing loans will still follow SFH rules, which cap interest at 12% annually.
Why it matters now: Savings accounts-traditionally the backbone of mortgage funding-have seen sustained outflows as high interest rates made other investments more attractive.
With the benchmark Selic rate at 15%, banks face a mismatch: mortgages need long, stable funding, while savings balances have been ebbing.
Brazil's Housing Reform Tests Market Confidence
The reform is meant to plug that gap by letting banks pair market-raised money dedicated to housing with an equivalent amount of cheaper savings for broader use, freeing balance sheets and, in theory, lowering mortgage costs for the middle class.
Why the real fell: Investors welcomed the clearer roadmap but remain cautious. The reform arrives amid renewed fiscal jitters in Brasília, a combination that can widen risk premiums and push the exchange rate higher even when the global dollar is softer.
The bigger story: If the transition lands well, Brazil could expand homeownership and reduce financing costs without relying on rigid savings mandates. But execution will be watched closely: markets want proof that banks can fund mortgages more efficiently-without unsettling a still-fragile macro backdrop.
The immediate backdrop at home: President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Finance Minister Fernando Haddad, and Central Bank chief Gabriel Galípolo rolled out a long-debated overhaul of how mortgages are funded.
What changed: For decades, Brazil's housing credit relied on a rule forcing banks to channel 65% of savings-account deposits into real-estate loans, with another slice locked up as compulsory reserves at the Central Bank .
The government will phase out those earmarks and reserves and move to a new framework that blends market funding with savings, aiming to provide cheaper, steadier money for mortgages.
The transition starts this year and the new model becomes fully effective in January 2027. The cap on homes eligible for the regulated SFH system rises from R$1.5 million to R$2.25 million.
During the transition, compulsory reserves tied to savings fall to 15%. The Central Bank says 80% of housing loans will still follow SFH rules, which cap interest at 12% annually.
Why it matters now: Savings accounts-traditionally the backbone of mortgage funding-have seen sustained outflows as high interest rates made other investments more attractive.
With the benchmark Selic rate at 15%, banks face a mismatch: mortgages need long, stable funding, while savings balances have been ebbing.
Brazil's Housing Reform Tests Market Confidence
The reform is meant to plug that gap by letting banks pair market-raised money dedicated to housing with an equivalent amount of cheaper savings for broader use, freeing balance sheets and, in theory, lowering mortgage costs for the middle class.
Why the real fell: Investors welcomed the clearer roadmap but remain cautious. The reform arrives amid renewed fiscal jitters in Brasília, a combination that can widen risk premiums and push the exchange rate higher even when the global dollar is softer.
The bigger story: If the transition lands well, Brazil could expand homeownership and reduce financing costs without relying on rigid savings mandates. But execution will be watched closely: markets want proof that banks can fund mortgages more efficiently-without unsettling a still-fragile macro backdrop.

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