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Brazil's Lula To Meet U.S. President Trump In Malaysia On Sunday To Repair Trade Ties
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Presidents Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Donald Trump are expected to sit down on Sunday in Kuala Lumpur on the sidelines of the ASEAN leaders' meetings.
It is an unusual stage for a U.S.–Brazil reset, but that is the point: both governments want to lower the temperature and reopen a practical channel on trade after a rough year.
The meeting crowns Lula's Asia swing: a state visit to Indonesia, then Malaysia for the ASEAN Summit and East Asia Summit.
It is the first time a Brazilian president joins an ASEAN leaders' gathering. Kuala Lumpur is 11 hours ahead of Brasília; a mid-morning summit opening in Malaysia pushes most leader bilaterals into the early hours of Sunday in Brazil.
The agenda is straightforward. Brasília is seeking a clearer path for Brazilian exports -food, energy, and industrial inputs-into the U.S. market and relief from tariff measures that raised costs for selected products this year.
Washington wants steadier political ties with Latin America's largest economy and a framework that gives U.S. firms more regulatory predictability in Brazil.
Brazilian officials stress this is not about domestic legal battles involving former president Jair Bolsonaro; the focus is economics.
Brazil Seeks Stronger Southeast Asia Links Amid U.S. Relations
The broader backdrop explains the timing. ASEAN counts more than 680 million people and roughly $4 trillion in combined GDP. Brazil's trade with the bloc reached about $37 billion in 2024, and Lula 's itinerary includes business forums designed to deepen that flow.
A possible meeting with India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi would underscore overlapping interests in supply chains, energy security, and agri-trade.
The story behind the story is a test of balance. Lula is trying to diversify Brazil's commercial ties in fast-growing Southeast Asia while recalibrating relations with Washington under Trump.
For investors and exporters outside Brazil, the signal to watch is not the photo-op but the readout: working groups on tariffs, timelines for technical talks, or sector-specific pilots.
Even a modest package-if paired with a calmer tone-would mark the start of a reset and reduce uncertainty for businesses on both sides.
It is an unusual stage for a U.S.–Brazil reset, but that is the point: both governments want to lower the temperature and reopen a practical channel on trade after a rough year.
The meeting crowns Lula's Asia swing: a state visit to Indonesia, then Malaysia for the ASEAN Summit and East Asia Summit.
It is the first time a Brazilian president joins an ASEAN leaders' gathering. Kuala Lumpur is 11 hours ahead of Brasília; a mid-morning summit opening in Malaysia pushes most leader bilaterals into the early hours of Sunday in Brazil.
The agenda is straightforward. Brasília is seeking a clearer path for Brazilian exports -food, energy, and industrial inputs-into the U.S. market and relief from tariff measures that raised costs for selected products this year.
Washington wants steadier political ties with Latin America's largest economy and a framework that gives U.S. firms more regulatory predictability in Brazil.
Brazilian officials stress this is not about domestic legal battles involving former president Jair Bolsonaro; the focus is economics.
Brazil Seeks Stronger Southeast Asia Links Amid U.S. Relations
The broader backdrop explains the timing. ASEAN counts more than 680 million people and roughly $4 trillion in combined GDP. Brazil's trade with the bloc reached about $37 billion in 2024, and Lula 's itinerary includes business forums designed to deepen that flow.
A possible meeting with India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi would underscore overlapping interests in supply chains, energy security, and agri-trade.
The story behind the story is a test of balance. Lula is trying to diversify Brazil's commercial ties in fast-growing Southeast Asia while recalibrating relations with Washington under Trump.
For investors and exporters outside Brazil, the signal to watch is not the photo-op but the readout: working groups on tariffs, timelines for technical talks, or sector-specific pilots.
Even a modest package-if paired with a calmer tone-would mark the start of a reset and reduce uncertainty for businesses on both sides.
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