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Brazil Leads The BRICS In Foreign Investment - And What That Really Means
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil today is the most foreign-capital-intensive economy in the BRICS club. The stock of foreign direct investment (FDI) has reached about US$ 1.14 trillion, roughly 46.6% of GDP, with earlier estimates pointing to more than R$ 1.1 trillion in local currency.
That makes Brazil more“internationalised” than China, India, Russia or South Africa when you look at FDI relative to the size of the economy, not just in absolute dollars.
FDI is long-term money: foreign companies buying factories, banks and infrastructure, not short-term bets on bonds.
In Brazil 's case, about US$ 884.8 billion are equity stakes in almost 19,000 companies and roughly US$ 256.4 billion are inter-company loans between headquarters and local subsidiaries.
The United States is by far the largest investor, followed by the Netherlands, Luxembourg, France and Spain – a reminder that the country's real partners remain private capital and advanced economies rather than political slogans.
Services absorb around 59% of all foreign investment, ahead of industry (29%) and farming plus mining (12%). Financial services alone account for about 22% of the total, while oil and gas extraction represents around 8%, with strong positions in trade, power generation, chemicals and autos.
Foreign capital flows boost Brazil
New money is now also flowing into data centres, artificial intelligence, bioeconomy projects and energy transition, alongside a new wave of investment in electric vehicles building on Brazil's long-established auto base.
This weight of foreign capital is the result of a century-long strategy. While China and other BRICS received massive inflows mainly over the last few decades, Brazil industrialised earlier, often under heavy protection but also by inviting multinationals to build plants and supply a vast domestic market.
The share of FDI in GDP was barely 6.1% in 1995, passed 25% by 2010 and has almost doubled again since then. For the macroeconomy, the numbers are a buffer and a warning.
Strong FDI inflows help finance Brazil's current-account deficit and sit on top of a large stock of international reserves, keeping the balance of payments comfortable even when markets are nervous.
But the same dependence means large profit remittances abroad and exposure to global risk appetite – a reason why serious fiscal policy, regulatory stability and respect for contracts matter far more than ideological speeches for a country that wants to keep real investors, not just tourists, coming.
That makes Brazil more“internationalised” than China, India, Russia or South Africa when you look at FDI relative to the size of the economy, not just in absolute dollars.
FDI is long-term money: foreign companies buying factories, banks and infrastructure, not short-term bets on bonds.
In Brazil 's case, about US$ 884.8 billion are equity stakes in almost 19,000 companies and roughly US$ 256.4 billion are inter-company loans between headquarters and local subsidiaries.
The United States is by far the largest investor, followed by the Netherlands, Luxembourg, France and Spain – a reminder that the country's real partners remain private capital and advanced economies rather than political slogans.
Services absorb around 59% of all foreign investment, ahead of industry (29%) and farming plus mining (12%). Financial services alone account for about 22% of the total, while oil and gas extraction represents around 8%, with strong positions in trade, power generation, chemicals and autos.
Foreign capital flows boost Brazil
New money is now also flowing into data centres, artificial intelligence, bioeconomy projects and energy transition, alongside a new wave of investment in electric vehicles building on Brazil's long-established auto base.
This weight of foreign capital is the result of a century-long strategy. While China and other BRICS received massive inflows mainly over the last few decades, Brazil industrialised earlier, often under heavy protection but also by inviting multinationals to build plants and supply a vast domestic market.
The share of FDI in GDP was barely 6.1% in 1995, passed 25% by 2010 and has almost doubled again since then. For the macroeconomy, the numbers are a buffer and a warning.
Strong FDI inflows help finance Brazil's current-account deficit and sit on top of a large stock of international reserves, keeping the balance of payments comfortable even when markets are nervous.
But the same dependence means large profit remittances abroad and exposure to global risk appetite – a reason why serious fiscal policy, regulatory stability and respect for contracts matter far more than ideological speeches for a country that wants to keep real investors, not just tourists, coming.
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