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Dollar Softens As Brazil's Real Rides High-Rate Tailwinds
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
USD/BRL is hovering near 5.31 as traders bet heavily on a U.S. rate cut next week.
Brazil's double-digit Selic rate and solid portfolio inflows keep the real attractive in global carry trades.
Technicals show a multi-month dollar downtrend against the real, though a short-term bounce is possible if the Fed disappoints doves.
The dollar's latest slide against the Brazilian real is being driven less by Brasília and more by Washington. After a weak U.S. private payrolls report signalled job losses instead of the small gain economists expected, markets raised the odds of a Federal Reserve rate cut next week to almost 90 percent.
Treasury yields fell, Wall Street rallied and the dollar index slipped to its lowest area in more than a month. In that global“risk-on” mood, Latin American currencies outperformed.
The real joined the move, with spot USD/BRL closing on Wednesday at 5.3133, down 0.32 percent on the day, and trading around 5.31 on Thursday morning.
Fed and Copom now in focus
Brazil's fundamentals help amplify every shift in Fed expectations. With Selic still at 15 percent and the central bank signalling caution, the interest-rate gap versus the United States remains wide.
Foreign money has been pouring into local assets. For investors who prefer predictable, rules-based monetary policy and worry about fiscal experiments, Brazil's mix of high real rates and an orthodox central bank remains appealing.
Charts tell a similar story. On the four-hour chart, USD/BRL has slipped to the bottom of a recent 5.30–5.36 band, with oversold momentum suggesting room for a short-term rebound.
Daily candles, however, still show a broader sideways range between about 5.25 and 5.40. On the weekly time frame, the pair sits above a thick support zone near 5.25, with long-term moving averages pointing down.
That leaves the next Fed and Copom meetings, both scheduled for 9–10 December, as the key catalysts. A cautious U.S. central bank that cuts once but pushes back against pressure for a rapid easing cycle would likely stabilise the dollar and test carry-trade enthusiasm.
A more aggressive move, or renewed fiscal noise in Brasília, could quickly remind markets that even favoured emerging stories can turn.
USD/BRL is hovering near 5.31 as traders bet heavily on a U.S. rate cut next week.
Brazil's double-digit Selic rate and solid portfolio inflows keep the real attractive in global carry trades.
Technicals show a multi-month dollar downtrend against the real, though a short-term bounce is possible if the Fed disappoints doves.
The dollar's latest slide against the Brazilian real is being driven less by Brasília and more by Washington. After a weak U.S. private payrolls report signalled job losses instead of the small gain economists expected, markets raised the odds of a Federal Reserve rate cut next week to almost 90 percent.
Treasury yields fell, Wall Street rallied and the dollar index slipped to its lowest area in more than a month. In that global“risk-on” mood, Latin American currencies outperformed.
The real joined the move, with spot USD/BRL closing on Wednesday at 5.3133, down 0.32 percent on the day, and trading around 5.31 on Thursday morning.
Fed and Copom now in focus
Brazil's fundamentals help amplify every shift in Fed expectations. With Selic still at 15 percent and the central bank signalling caution, the interest-rate gap versus the United States remains wide.
Foreign money has been pouring into local assets. For investors who prefer predictable, rules-based monetary policy and worry about fiscal experiments, Brazil's mix of high real rates and an orthodox central bank remains appealing.
Charts tell a similar story. On the four-hour chart, USD/BRL has slipped to the bottom of a recent 5.30–5.36 band, with oversold momentum suggesting room for a short-term rebound.
Daily candles, however, still show a broader sideways range between about 5.25 and 5.40. On the weekly time frame, the pair sits above a thick support zone near 5.25, with long-term moving averages pointing down.
That leaves the next Fed and Copom meetings, both scheduled for 9–10 December, as the key catalysts. A cautious U.S. central bank that cuts once but pushes back against pressure for a rapid easing cycle would likely stabilise the dollar and test carry-trade enthusiasm.
A more aggressive move, or renewed fiscal noise in Brasília, could quickly remind markets that even favoured emerging stories can turn.
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