Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil's Largest Pension Fund Posts R$12.5B Surplus After 2024 Loss


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

- Previ, Banco do Brasil's pension fund and Brazil's largest, closed 2025 with a R$12.5 billion ($2.2 billion) accumulated surplus after generating R$15.7 billion ($2.8 billion) in the year

- The result reverses a R$3.2 billion ($570 million) deficit from 2024, with Plan 1 returning 16.8% versus an 8.8% actuarial target, driven by nearly 40% equity returns

- The fund surpassed R$300 billion ($53 billion) in total assets and paid a record R$17 billion ($3 billion) in benefits without selling assets to meet obligations

After a 2024 that triggered a federal audit and a leadership change, Brazil's largest pension fund has bounced back emphatically. Previ, the retirement fund for Banco do Brasil employees, reported an accumulated surplus of R$12.5 billion ($2.2 billion) at year-end 2025, reversing a R$3.2 billion ($570 million) deficit that had raised alarm bells about the financial health of an institution responsible for the retirement income of more than 100,000 people. The Previ surplus was built on a R$15.7 billion ($2.8 billion) annual result, the strongest in recent years, powered by a 34% rally in the Ibovespa and high fixed-income yields from the 15% Selic environment. This is part of The Rio Times' daily coverage of Brazil financial news English and Latin American financial markets.

Previ Surplus Driven by Equities and Inflation-Linked Bonds

Plan 1, Previ's flagship and oldest portfolio serving 78,000 retirees and 23,000 pensioners, delivered 16.8% returns against an actuarial target of 8.8% (INPC plus 4.75%). Equities returned nearly 40%, led by holdings in Vale, Petrobras, and Banco do Brasil itself. Fixed income, which represents 69.3% of the R$258 billion Plan 1 portfolio, added a steadier 10.6%. The fund also capitalized on elevated real interest rates by purchasing inflation-linked government bonds (NTN-Bs) at an average yield of IPCA plus 7.36% - a rate that locks in strong real returns for decades and strengthens the liability-matching strategy designed to immunize the plan against long-term actuarial risks.

The fund divested R$21 billion ($3.7 billion) from 12 companies during the year, including complete exits from BRF (R$2.4 billion) and Neoenergia (R$12 billion). President Márcio Chiumento, who took over in October 2025 after his predecessor resigned amid scrutiny over the 2024 deficit, characterized the sales as opportunistic rather than strategic shifts. Core positions in Vale, Petrobras, Banco do Brasil, Vibra, and Bradesco remain intact. Dividends alone contributed R$4.4 billion ($780 million) in income.

Record Benefits Without Asset Liquidation

Perhaps the most significant operational metric is that Previ paid a record R$17 billion ($3 billion) in benefits in 2025 - and covered 98% of that outflow from current income: R$4.4 billion in dividends, R$8.1 billion in bond interest and coupons, R$900 million in rental income, and R$3.3 billion in contributions. The fund did not need to liquidate portfolio assets to meet obligations, a distinction Chiumento highlighted as a core structural advantage. Director Adriana Chagastelles added that the probability of a mandatory deficit equalization - the point at which the sponsor and participants must inject additional capital - has fallen to 0.03% through 2032, the lowest in Previ's 122-year history. Such an equalization would only be triggered if the accumulated deficit exceeded R$22 billion ($3.9 billion).

The Previ Futuro plan, the only plan still open to new members, closed 2025 with R$42.1 billion ($7.5 billion) in assets and 16.1% returns, also comfortably above its benchmark. With total assets now exceeding R$300 billion ($53 billion), Previ remains not only the largest pension fund in Brazil but one of the largest in Latin America. As The Rio Times has reported, the fund's trajectory serves as a barometer for Brazil's institutional investment landscape: when the Ibovespa rallies and real rates stay elevated, Previ thrives; when both turn against it, as in 2024, even the best-managed fund in the system can find itself in deficit. The 2025 result buys time and credibility, but with markets now facing geopolitical volatility and election-year uncertainty, sustaining these returns in 2026 will test whether the structural improvements are as durable as the headline numbers suggest.

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The Rio Times

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