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Brazil Stocks Slip As Trade Tensions Bite Fed Hints Temper The Blow
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's market opened Wednesday cautious after a risk-off session that left the Ibovespa down 0.07% at 141,682.99. The dollar firmed to R$5.47 ($1.03), a reminder that global nerves-not local headlines-are steering the tape.
The immediate spark came from Washington and Beijing. Both sides began charging extra port fees on ocean shipments, and President Donald Trump said he is weighing curbs on trade with China in products such as cooking oil and soy.
For Brazil-one of the world's top soy exporters-those threats hit close to home, raising questions about shipping costs, agricultural demand, and supply-chain reliability.
At the same time, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signaled the end of quantitative tightening may be“coming into view” and kept the door open to meeting-by-meeting rate cuts.
Yields eased, but not enough to overcome trade anxiety: U.S. stocks finished mixed, Europe slipped, and most of Asia fell.
At home, the macro picture stayed resilient. Services output rose 0.1% in August from July and 2.5% year on year-seven straight monthly gains that fit a soft-landing narrative.
Markets Hold Steady as Brasília Faces Fiscal Test
The fiscal story was less settled: Finance Minister Fernando Haddad said the government will craft alternatives to offset the budget hole after the provisional measure on IOF was archived, keeping Brasília's arithmetic front and center for investors.
Stock moves told the tale. Embraer rallied after lessor TrueNoord ordered 20 E195-E2 jets (with rights for 30 more), burnishing an already strong backlog.
Minerva advanced after a broker lifted its target price to R$9 ($1.70) and kept a buy call. Banks were mixed following a major house's sector review. Petrobras eased with weaker oil, while Vale edged higher even as Chinese iron ore fell.
Technically, the index is marking time. On the daily chart, RSI sits in the mid-40s and prices hug the mid-to-lower Bollinger band-neutral to soft momentum.
The four-hour chart shows basing near 141,100; a push above 142,600 would reopen 143,000, while a close below 141,100 risks 140,000. The story behind the story: Brazil is caught between great-power trade brinkmanship and its own fiscal clarity.
Growth is holding, but risk appetite will swing with fresh U.S.–China headlines, oil for Petrobras, iron ore for Vale, and any concrete signals from Brasília on how it will balance the books.
The immediate spark came from Washington and Beijing. Both sides began charging extra port fees on ocean shipments, and President Donald Trump said he is weighing curbs on trade with China in products such as cooking oil and soy.
For Brazil-one of the world's top soy exporters-those threats hit close to home, raising questions about shipping costs, agricultural demand, and supply-chain reliability.
At the same time, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signaled the end of quantitative tightening may be“coming into view” and kept the door open to meeting-by-meeting rate cuts.
Yields eased, but not enough to overcome trade anxiety: U.S. stocks finished mixed, Europe slipped, and most of Asia fell.
At home, the macro picture stayed resilient. Services output rose 0.1% in August from July and 2.5% year on year-seven straight monthly gains that fit a soft-landing narrative.
Markets Hold Steady as Brasília Faces Fiscal Test
The fiscal story was less settled: Finance Minister Fernando Haddad said the government will craft alternatives to offset the budget hole after the provisional measure on IOF was archived, keeping Brasília's arithmetic front and center for investors.
Stock moves told the tale. Embraer rallied after lessor TrueNoord ordered 20 E195-E2 jets (with rights for 30 more), burnishing an already strong backlog.
Minerva advanced after a broker lifted its target price to R$9 ($1.70) and kept a buy call. Banks were mixed following a major house's sector review. Petrobras eased with weaker oil, while Vale edged higher even as Chinese iron ore fell.
Technically, the index is marking time. On the daily chart, RSI sits in the mid-40s and prices hug the mid-to-lower Bollinger band-neutral to soft momentum.
The four-hour chart shows basing near 141,100; a push above 142,600 would reopen 143,000, while a close below 141,100 risks 140,000. The story behind the story: Brazil is caught between great-power trade brinkmanship and its own fiscal clarity.
Growth is holding, but risk appetite will swing with fresh U.S.–China headlines, oil for Petrobras, iron ore for Vale, and any concrete signals from Brasília on how it will balance the books.

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