USD/BRL Holds Below 5.20 As Flat US Retail Sales Boost Fed Cut Bets And Carry Flows
| Metric | Value | Change |
|---|---|---|
| USD/BRL Close | 5.1931 | −0.01% |
| DXY | 96.73 | −0.09% |
| US 10Y Yield | 4.15% | −6 bps |
| Ibovespa | 186,241 | +1.80% |
| Selic | 15.00% | unchanged |
| S&P 500 | 6,951 | −0.19% |
| Dow Jones | 50,188 | +0.10% |
| VIX | 17.79 | +2.48% |
| Brent Crude | $69.07 | +1.50% |
| Gold | $5,051 | +0.8% |
| Bitcoin | $68,590 | −2.24% |
Tuesday's session was dominated by the delayed US December retail sales report, which showed consumer spending was completely flat - missing the 0.4% consensus and marking the weakest holiday-period print in two years.
Core retail sales, the measure that feeds into GDP calculations, fell 0.1% after a downward revision to November's data. The Atlanta Fed immediately cut its Q4 GDP growth estimate to 3.7% from 4.2%, and bond traders piled into Treasuries, sending the 10-year yield to 4.15%.
The implications for USD/BRL were clear but contained. A weaker US economy strengthens the case for multiple Fed rate cuts, compressing the yield differential advantage that the dollar held over high-carry currencies.
With the Selic at 15% and Boletim Focus showing 2026 IPCA expectations at 3.97% - below 4% for the first time - the real's carry profile remains among the most attractive in emerging markets. Money markets now price three Fed cuts this year, up from two a week ago.
Adding to dollar pressure, reports emerged that Chinese regulators have advised domestic financial institutions to limit their holdings of US Treasuries to reduce concentration risks.
The headline deepened the "Sell America" narrative that has fuelled EM inflows since January, with the DXY falling to 96.73.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the dollar is being "artificially pushed higher" by other countries seeking to boost exports to the US - an unusual admission from a senior administration official.
The Ibovespa surged 1.80% to a fresh all-time closing high of 186,241, led by heavyweight banks (Santander Brasil +6%, Banco do Brasil +2%), commodities (Vale +1.9%, Petrobras +2%), and high-beta names (Magazine Luiza +7%).
The record close reinforces the narrative that Brazilian equities are in a structural re-rating driven by easing expectations, high real yields, and R$23 billion in net foreign inflows during January.
4-Hour Chart ICE:USDBRL · 4H Ichimoku · Bollinger Bands · MACD · RSI Source: TradingView 03Technical AnalysisOn the daily timeframe, USD/BRL continues to trade well below the Ichimoku cloud, with the lagging span confirming the bearish trend.
The pair sits at 5.1985, pressed against the lower Bollinger Band at 5.2297, suggesting continued downside pressure though the pace of the decline is moderating.
The daily MACD remains deeply negative with the signal line at −0.0483 and the MACD line at −0.0495 - both in sell territory though beginning to converge, hinting at a potential deceleration of bearish momentum.
Daily RSI stands at 35.37/33.60, approaching the oversold zone but not yet triggering a reversal signal. The key observation is that price has broken below the lower Bollinger Band for several sessions running - a condition that historically precedes either a sharp bounce or an extended waterfall decline.
The 4-hour chart shows the pair consolidating in a tight range between 5.1966 and 5.2134 after the late-January selloff. The 4H Ichimoku cloud overhead (5.2246–5.2658) acts as a strong resistance ceiling. The 4H MACD is near the zero line at −0.0001, with signal and MACD lines at −0.0114 and −0.0115 respectively - a near-neutral reading suggesting momentum has stalled.
The 4H RSI at 41.53/38.90 is in the lower half of the range but not oversold, consistent with a consolidation phase rather than a fresh leg lower. The Bollinger Bands are contracting, typically a precursor to a breakout in either direction.
Key Levels| Level | Price | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Support 1 | 5.1730 | Session low / intraday demand |
| Support 2 | 5.1655 | 52-week low (Jan 27) |
| Support 3 | 5.1000 | Psychological / weekly extension |
| Resistance 1 | 5.2134 | 4H Bollinger mid-band |
| Resistance 2 | 5.2297 | Daily lower Bollinger Band |
| Resistance 3 | 5.2951 | Daily Ichimoku base / 50-DMA area |
Wednesday brings the most consequential 48-hour data window of the year. The delayed US January nonfarm payrolls (consensus ~70,000) arrive alongside Brazil's IPCA inflation print.
Thursday follows with US CPI. A weak US jobs number combined with a benign IPCA reading would cement the March Copom rate cut and likely push USD/BRL toward the 5.10 handle. Conversely, an upside surprise in either jobs or IPCA would stall the rally and force a repricing of the entire easing narrative.
The IPCA print is the gatekeeper for the March 17–18 Copom meeting. The Focus survey's fifth consecutive decline in inflation expectations - now at 3.97% - has made a 50bp cut the base case. But any upside surprise would complicate Galípolo's "calibragem" messaging and cap the real's rally.
On the geopolitical front, US–Iran tensions remain elevated after the US warned American-flagged ships to avoid Iranian waters in the Strait of Hormuz, keeping Brent supported near $69. Ford reports after the bell Tuesday, and Coca-Cola's 2% drop after a cautious 2026 outlook added to the defensive tone in US equities.
VerdictBias: Sell. The macro backdrop is firmly bullish for the real: declining US growth expectations, rising probability of three Fed cuts, falling 10-year yields, a weakening DXY, and Brazil's 15% Selic anchoring one of the highest carry profiles in EM. Technically, the daily and 4H charts confirm the bearish trend in USD/BRL is intact, though RSI approaching oversold and Bollinger Band compression suggest the next move will come on a data catalyst rather than momentum alone. The NFP/IPCA/CPI gauntlet Wednesday–Thursday is the trigger. A benign trifecta would likely break 5.1655 (52-week low) and open 5.10; a hawkish surprise would snap the pair back toward 5.25. Position accordingly.
Disclaimer: This report is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading foreign exchange carries significant risk. Consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.
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