USD/BRL Holds Near 5.19 As CPI Day Looms
| Metric | Value | Change |
|---|---|---|
| USD/BRL (Feb 12 close) | 5.1917 | −0.48% |
| Session High | 5.2727 | - |
| Session Low | 5.1730 | - |
| Previous Close | 5.2166 | - |
| DXY (Dollar Index) | 96.96 | +0.08% |
| EUR/USD | 1.1916 | +0.81% |
| USD/JPY | 152.76 | −0.22% |
| Selic Rate | 15.00% | unchanged |
| Fed Funds Rate | 3.50% | unchanged |
| 10Y UST Yield | 4.10% | −1.63% |
| VIX | 20.82 | +17.95% |
| Gold (XAU/USD) | $5,080 | +0.37% |
| Brent Crude | $63.46 | +1.81% |
| 52-Week Range | 5.1655 – 6.0966 | −10.30% YoY |
The real extended its grind stronger on Thursday, with USD/BRL closing at 5.1917 - down 0.48% - despite a marginal uptick in the DXY. The session saw a wide intraday range from 5.1730 to 5.2727, reflecting the tension between carry-driven BRL demand and pre-CPI positioning. The pair tested within striking distance of the 52-week low at 5.1655, a level that has served as the floor since January 28. Notably, the real outperformed the broader EM complex, with the Turkish lira and South African rand both losing ground.
The structural narrative remains firmly bullish for the real. The Selic–Fed rate differential of 1,150 basis points continues to attract foreign flows, with January inflows hitting a record R$26.3 billion. Copom 's January statement - which for the first time explicitly signaled easing could begin at the March 17–18 meeting - has paradoxically reinforced the carry trade rather than undermined it: the market reads a controlled, data-dependent 50bp initial cut as a sign of institutional credibility rather than a pivot toward aggressive loosening. The consensus year-end Selic target of 12.25% still leaves Brazil with among the highest real yields globally.
On the U.S. side, the dollar index held sideways near 97 for a fourth straight session. Wednesday's stronger-than-expected nonfarm payrolls (+130,000 vs. 53,000 expected) initially supported the greenback, but weekly jobless claims above forecasts tempered the bullish impulse. Markets are pricing a 94%+ probability that the Fed holds at March, with the first cut penciled in for June after Chair Powell's term ends in May. Wall Street brokerages are remarkably aligned: Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and BofA all project two 25bp cuts (June + September), while Citigroup is the outlier at 75bp across three meetings.
The yen's 2%+ weekly rally against the dollar - fueled by Prime Minister Takaichi's decisive election win and verbal intervention from Tokyo - added a cross-currency tailwind to BRL positioning. The Australian dollar also strengthened on hawkish RBA signals. Oil's modest rebound to $63.46/bbl on Brent (+1.81%) added marginal support through commodity-FX linkages, while gold's push back above $5,080 and record trade surplus projections for Brazil in 2026 further underpinned the real.
03 Technical AnalysisDaily timeframe: The daily chart shows price trading at 5.2120, well below the Ichimoku cloud with the Tenkan-sen at 5.2176 and Kijun-sen at 5.2543 both acting as overhead resistance. The pair has carved out a sustained downtrend since the December 2025 highs near 6.10, with the Senkou Span A at 5.2890 and Senkou Span B at 5.3805 forming a thick bearish cloud above. The MACD remains in bearish territory with the signal line at −0.0462 and histogram at −0.0481, though momentum is flattening - suggesting the sell-off is maturing rather than accelerating. RSI at 38.97/34.50 is approaching oversold territory, the lowest reading since the pair's initial plunge in January. The lower Bollinger Band sits at 5.1328, marking the technical floor. A break below would expose the psychologically important 5.10 handle.
4-hour timeframe: The 4H chart reveals a more nuanced consolidation pattern. After the sharp decline from 5.55+ in late January, price has entered a tighter range between 5.17 and 5.23. The Ichimoku cloud on this timeframe shows the Tenkan-sen at 5.2172 and Kijun-sen at 5.2186, with price sitting at the lower edge of the cloud near 5.2120. The MACD has crossed above the signal line (0.0047 vs. −0.0052), suggesting nascent bullish momentum on the shorter timeframe. RSI at 54.17/41.44 shows a divergence between the two periods - the shorter reading is neutral while the longer is bearish, typical of a consolidation within a downtrend. The middle Bollinger Band at 5.2218 is acting as a magnet, with the upper band at 5.3499 capping any rallies and the lower band at 5.1912 providing immediate support. The 200-period SMA (blue line) at 5.3499 remains decisively above price, confirming the medium-term bearish bias.
| Level | Price | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Resistance 3 | 5.3499 | 200-SMA (4H) / Upper BB (4H) |
| Resistance 2 | 5.2890 | Middle Bollinger Band (daily) |
| Resistance 1 | 5.2543 | Kijun-sen (daily) |
| Spot | 5.1917 | Feb 12 close |
| Support 1 | 5.1912 | Lower Bollinger Band (4H) |
| Support 2 | 5.1655 | 52-week low (Jan 28) |
| Support 3 | 5.1328 | Lower Bollinger Band (daily) |
| Support 4 | 5.1000 | Psychological round number |
| Institution | View | Key Thesis |
|---|---|---|
| RBC Capital Markets | Short USD/BRL - Top EM Call | Fat carry + cheap valuation; BRL most undervalued EM FX. 200–250bp BCB cuts starting March still leave overnight rate near 12.50% year-end. |
| Goldman Sachs | Bearish USD | 50bp Fed cuts in June + September to 3.00–3.25%. DXY weakness benefits high-carry EM currencies. |
| Morgan Stanley | Bearish USD | 50bp Fed cuts (June + September). Weaker dollar supports EM and commodity currencies broadly. |
| BofA Securities | 50bp Selic cut March | Previously forecasted January cut; now aligned with market consensus for March start of easing cycle. |
| Citigroup | Most Dovish - 75bp Fed cuts | Three cuts (April, July, September) to 2.75–3.00%. Most aggressive dollar-weakening forecast. |
Today, February 13 - U.S. January CPI (8:30 a.m. ET): The make-or-break event for the session. Consensus at 2.5% headline and 2.5–2.6% core. FactSet's median is slightly lower at 2.4% y/y. Note that CPI has come in below consensus for three consecutive months - a benign print would put USD/BRL firmly on a path toward the 5.16–5.17 52-week lows. A hot print (above 2.6%) would trigger dollar buying and squeeze leveraged BRL longs ahead of the Carnival shutdown.
Carnival (Feb 16–18): B3 closed Monday and Tuesday. Reduced hours on Ash Wednesday. Expect compressed positioning Friday as FX desks square books. Historically, pre-Carnival USD/BRL volatility is elevated as liquidity thins. Any gap risk from U.S. data releases during the closure will be priced into Wednesday's reopening.
Copom March 17–18: The market prices a 50bp Selic cut as the base case. Copom's January statement explicitly anticipated easing at the next meeting if the expected scenario confirms. The Focus survey's five consecutive weeks of declining IPCA forecasts (now 3.97% for 2026 - below 4% for the first time) provides the cover. The question is pace: some analysts expect 25bp for caution, but most project 50bp to 12.25% by year-end.
Key risk - October/November elections: RBC flagged political turbulence around the presidential election as the primary risk to BRL strength. Fiscal discipline will be tested as the campaign heats up, and Finance Minister Haddad's expected departure to join Lula's campaign team could rattle fiscal credibility. Public debt is projected to rise by nearly 12 percentage points of GDP over Lula's term - any perception of fiscal slippage could cap BRL gains.
VerdictBRL carry remains the dominant trade - but let CPI clear before adding risk.
The structural setup for continued real strength is compelling: record foreign inflows, a 1,150bp rate differential, a central bank that has signaled the easing cycle with institutional precision, and a weakening dollar. However, CPI day carries binary risk, and the two-day Carnival closure removes the ability to hedge intraday. A soft CPI (at or below 2.4%) likely sends USD/BRL to test 5.1655 or below. A hot print (above 2.6% headline or core) could trigger a 1–2% snapback toward 5.25–5.28. Position accordingly: Moderately Bearish USD/BRL on the daily; Neutral on the 4H until CPI resolves. The medium-term bias remains firmly toward lower USD/BRL, with a year-end consensus range of 4.80–5.10.
Disclaimer: This report is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions. Data sourced from Bloomberg, TradingView, Investing, Trading Economics, Yahoo Finance, CME FedWatch, RBC Capital Markets, Reuters, CNBC, and Xe. © 2026 Rio Times Online.
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