403
Sorry!!
Error! We're sorry, but the page you were looking for doesn't exist.
Brazil's Postal Giant Shrinks To Survive As Losses Mount
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil is about to close up to 1,000 post offices and borrow R$ 20 billion ($3.7 billion) to keep its postal service alive.
For a company that once symbolized the reach of the state into every corner of the country, the plan is less a“modernization” and more a rescue after years of delay and political interference.
Correios briefly returned to profit in 2021, then slipped back into heavy losses: R$ 767 million ($142 million) in 2022, R$ 597 million ($111 million) in 2023, R$ 2.6 billion ($481 million) in 2024 and about R$ 4.4 billion ($815 million) in the first half of 2025.
Keeping universal service running cost roughly R$ 5.4 billion ($1.0 billion) in that same period and still produced a net deficit of R$ 4.5 billion ($833 million).
The new three-stage plan - recovery, consolidation and growth - is built on a large Treasury-backed loan that banks will only accept in slices, plus deep cost cuts.
Up to 10,000 workers, 8.6% of the staff, are being targeted by a voluntary redundancy program expected to save about R$ 2 billion ($370 million) a year.
Correios' overhaul tests Brazil's discipline
The company also wants to raise around R$ 1.5 billion ($278 million) by selling unused buildings and to shut or reshape roughly 1,000 loss-making branches.
Behind the numbers sits a bigger story that matters to investors and observers abroad. For years, governments used Correios as a jobs machine and a trophy while digital commerce and private logistics firms raced ahead.
Investment was postponed, technology lagged and difficult choices were avoided. Now taxpayers are being asked to fund a last-chance diet.
At the same time, Correios still does things the market will not: delivering schoolbooks, exam papers, voting machines and emergency aid to remote towns. That is why the company insists that universal service is“non-negotiable” as it shrinks.
For expats and investors, this overhaul is a test of whether Brazil can slim down a state giant without losing essential services - and whether future governments will respect that discipline once the crisis passes.
For a company that once symbolized the reach of the state into every corner of the country, the plan is less a“modernization” and more a rescue after years of delay and political interference.
Correios briefly returned to profit in 2021, then slipped back into heavy losses: R$ 767 million ($142 million) in 2022, R$ 597 million ($111 million) in 2023, R$ 2.6 billion ($481 million) in 2024 and about R$ 4.4 billion ($815 million) in the first half of 2025.
Keeping universal service running cost roughly R$ 5.4 billion ($1.0 billion) in that same period and still produced a net deficit of R$ 4.5 billion ($833 million).
The new three-stage plan - recovery, consolidation and growth - is built on a large Treasury-backed loan that banks will only accept in slices, plus deep cost cuts.
Up to 10,000 workers, 8.6% of the staff, are being targeted by a voluntary redundancy program expected to save about R$ 2 billion ($370 million) a year.
Correios' overhaul tests Brazil's discipline
The company also wants to raise around R$ 1.5 billion ($278 million) by selling unused buildings and to shut or reshape roughly 1,000 loss-making branches.
Behind the numbers sits a bigger story that matters to investors and observers abroad. For years, governments used Correios as a jobs machine and a trophy while digital commerce and private logistics firms raced ahead.
Investment was postponed, technology lagged and difficult choices were avoided. Now taxpayers are being asked to fund a last-chance diet.
At the same time, Correios still does things the market will not: delivering schoolbooks, exam papers, voting machines and emergency aid to remote towns. That is why the company insists that universal service is“non-negotiable” as it shrinks.
For expats and investors, this overhaul is a test of whether Brazil can slim down a state giant without losing essential services - and whether future governments will respect that discipline once the crisis passes.
Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Comments
No comment