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Real Rallies As Brazil's Hawkish Central Bank Meets A Softer Fed
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
The US dollar slumped after a fresh Fed rate cut, while Brazil's central bank stayed firmly hawkish at 15%.
Global investors piled into high-yielding Latin American currencies, with the real leading gains against the dollar.
Technicals now point to consolidation in USD/BRL, with the broader 2025 downtrend in the dollar still intact.
Brazil's currency traded around 5.40 to the dollar on Friday morning, a day after a powerful rally from this week's peak near 5.49. The move followed a familiar script: Washington eased, Brasília did not.
In the United States, the Federal Reserve delivered another quarter-point rate cut and hinted at only cautious steps ahead.
Markets, hungry for cheaper money, immediately priced in more easing than officials suggested. The dolla index slipped toward the 98 mark, and Wall Street hovered near record highs as traders celebrated the prospect of looser policy.
Brazil's monetary authorities chose a different path. The central ban kept the Selic benchmark at a punishing 15% and warned that inflation risks and loose fiscal talk leave little room for early cuts.
November's 4.46% inflation reading, finally back inside the official target band, gave policymakers breathing space but not a reason to relax. The message was clear: discipline first, politics later.
Currency desks responded in kind. The MSCI Latin America FX gauge recorded one of its best sessions in months, with the real at the front of the pack.
Brazil's high real yields and a more comfortable current-account profile have turned the currency into a favourite carry trade again. Yet nerves remain. Investors still worry about budget drift, noisy legislative bargaining and the approaching 2026 election season.
That is one reason big banks argue for moderate rather than aggressive exposure to Brazil. On the charts, USD/BRL now trades below long-term resistance around 5.52, with support between 5.35 and 5.38.
Momentum indicators on four-hour and daily timeframes suggest a pause rather than a reversal: the dollar has lost steam, but a decisive break lower will still require consistent policy restraint – and a quieter political backdrop.
The US dollar slumped after a fresh Fed rate cut, while Brazil's central bank stayed firmly hawkish at 15%.
Global investors piled into high-yielding Latin American currencies, with the real leading gains against the dollar.
Technicals now point to consolidation in USD/BRL, with the broader 2025 downtrend in the dollar still intact.
Brazil's currency traded around 5.40 to the dollar on Friday morning, a day after a powerful rally from this week's peak near 5.49. The move followed a familiar script: Washington eased, Brasília did not.
In the United States, the Federal Reserve delivered another quarter-point rate cut and hinted at only cautious steps ahead.
Markets, hungry for cheaper money, immediately priced in more easing than officials suggested. The dolla index slipped toward the 98 mark, and Wall Street hovered near record highs as traders celebrated the prospect of looser policy.
Brazil's monetary authorities chose a different path. The central ban kept the Selic benchmark at a punishing 15% and warned that inflation risks and loose fiscal talk leave little room for early cuts.
November's 4.46% inflation reading, finally back inside the official target band, gave policymakers breathing space but not a reason to relax. The message was clear: discipline first, politics later.
Currency desks responded in kind. The MSCI Latin America FX gauge recorded one of its best sessions in months, with the real at the front of the pack.
Brazil's high real yields and a more comfortable current-account profile have turned the currency into a favourite carry trade again. Yet nerves remain. Investors still worry about budget drift, noisy legislative bargaining and the approaching 2026 election season.
That is one reason big banks argue for moderate rather than aggressive exposure to Brazil. On the charts, USD/BRL now trades below long-term resistance around 5.52, with support between 5.35 and 5.38.
Momentum indicators on four-hour and daily timeframes suggest a pause rather than a reversal: the dollar has lost steam, but a decisive break lower will still require consistent policy restraint – and a quieter political backdrop.
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