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Brazil's Vanishing Ipos: How Uncertainty Pushes Its Best Companies To New York
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
For outsiders, Brazil's stock market can look lively: the main index is near records and daily trading is heavy. Behind the screen, however, a quiet retreat is under way.
Brazil has not had a single new IPO since late 2021, while more than three dozen companies have delisted or are preparing to leave the local exchange.
The country has not run out of growth stories. Businesses in agribusiness, finance, logistics and infrastructure still invest and expand. The losers are local savers, pension funds and entrepreneurs who hoped to build national champions using domestic capital.
The problem is that the stock market no longer feels like the natural place to raise long-term capital. Real interest rates remain among the highest in the world, so investors earn attractive returns in bonds.
At the same time, public finances look fragile and the rules keep shifting. Markets see a widening deficit, new spending commitments and endless political battles around budget ceilings and tax changes. The sense is that governments prefer to spend now and fix later.
With the 2026 presidential race approaching, corporate boards hesitate to go public until they know whether the next administration will prioritise fiscal discipline and private investment, or revive a heavier state footprint.
While they wait, many firms choose safer, simpler paths: selling non-core assets, issuing debt or tapping investors through follow-on share offerings instead of IPOs.
Others go further and leave the exchange altogether. Easier procedures for buyouts, combined with depressed share prices, help explain the recent wave of delistings.
The most outward-looking Brazilian groups no longer wait for B3 at all. Tech and payments players such as Nubank, XP, PagSeguro and StoneCo listed directly in New York.
Inter reorganised itself and shifted its main listing there, betting on a global digital-bank story. JBS is preparing a dual listing on the NYSE, seeking deeper liquidity and a broader investor base.
For expats and foreign investors, the message is simple but uncomfortable. Brazil will keep producing profitable, innovative companies.
Yet unless politics and public finances become more predictable, many of those winners will raise capital, set their valuations and build their shareholder registers far from São Paulo.
Brazil has had no new IPOs since 2021 while over three dozen firms exit the local exchange.
High real interest rates, fragile public finances and election noise make long-term equity capital more attractive abroad.
As more champions list in New York, local savers and institutions lose influence over the country's corporate future.
For outsiders, Brazil's stock market can look lively: the main index is near records and daily trading is heavy. Behind the screen, however, a quiet retreat is under way.
Brazil has not had a single new IPO since late 2021, while more than three dozen companies have delisted or are preparing to leave the local exchange.
The country has not run out of growth stories. Businesses in agribusiness, finance, logistics and infrastructure still invest and expand. The losers are local savers, pension funds and entrepreneurs who hoped to build national champions using domestic capital.
The problem is that the stock market no longer feels like the natural place to raise long-term capital. Real interest rates remain among the highest in the world, so investors earn attractive returns in bonds.
At the same time, public finances look fragile and the rules keep shifting. Markets see a widening deficit, new spending commitments and endless political battles around budget ceilings and tax changes. The sense is that governments prefer to spend now and fix later.
With the 2026 presidential race approaching, corporate boards hesitate to go public until they know whether the next administration will prioritise fiscal discipline and private investment, or revive a heavier state footprint.
While they wait, many firms choose safer, simpler paths: selling non-core assets, issuing debt or tapping investors through follow-on share offerings instead of IPOs.
Others go further and leave the exchange altogether. Easier procedures for buyouts, combined with depressed share prices, help explain the recent wave of delistings.
The most outward-looking Brazilian groups no longer wait for B3 at all. Tech and payments players such as Nubank, XP, PagSeguro and StoneCo listed directly in New York.
Inter reorganised itself and shifted its main listing there, betting on a global digital-bank story. JBS is preparing a dual listing on the NYSE, seeking deeper liquidity and a broader investor base.
For expats and foreign investors, the message is simple but uncomfortable. Brazil will keep producing profitable, innovative companies.
Yet unless politics and public finances become more predictable, many of those winners will raise capital, set their valuations and build their shareholder registers far from São Paulo.
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