Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Banco Master Scandal Turns Into Brazil Banking's Biggest Corruption Test Of 2026


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

-The Banco Master scandal reached Brazil's Supreme Court on April 22 as the Second Chamber opened a virtual vote on whether to keep Paulo Henrique Costa, former president of BRB, in preventive custody over an alleged R$146.5 million (about US$29 million) bribery scheme.

-By 11:58 BRT the score stood at 2-0 to maintain the imprisonment, with votes from rapporteur André Mendonça and Luiz Fux; Justice Dias Toffoli declared himself suspeito, and the final deadline for votes is 23:59 on Friday, April 24.

-The same April 22 session saw BRB shareholders approve a capital increase of up to R$8.81 billion (about US$1.76 billion) to absorb losses from the toxic Banco Master deal that triggered the Central Bank's November 2025 liquidation of Daniel Vorcaro's institution.

Deep Dive → Investing in Brazil 2026: A Guide for International Capital

The Banco Master scandal has become the largest live Brazilian banking prosecution since the Lava Jato era, intersecting a federally supervised liquidation, a state-controlled bank recapitalization, and a sitting Supreme Court vote on a jailed CEO.

The Rio Times, the Latin American financial news outlet, reports that the Banco Master scandal moved onto the docket of Brazil's Supreme Federal Court on Wednesday, April 22, when the Second Chamber opened a virtual judgment at 11:00 BRT on the preventive imprisonment of Paulo Henrique Costa, the former president of BRB. Within an hour the score stood at 2-0 to uphold custody, with rapporteur André Mendonça and Luiz Fux both voting to keep Costa jailed. Justice Dias Toffoli declared himself suspeito and will not participate, leaving Gilmar Mendes and Nunes Marques still to register votes before the Friday, April 24 deadline.

Costa was arrested on April 16 by the Federal Police in the fourth phase of Operação Compliance Zero and transferred to the Papuda penitentiary complex in the Federal District. Mendonça's original detention order, now submitted to the panel for ratification, alleges that Costa negotiated R$146.5 million in bribes with Daniel Vorcaro, founder of Banco Master, with the payment delivered as six luxury apartments - four in São Paulo and two in Brasília, including a unit in the Valle dos Ipês development. The Federal Police has so far traced R$74 million in completed property transfers.

How the Banco Master scandal became a bribery case

The alleged quid pro quo is the heart of the case. Federal prosecutors argue that Costa used BRB's balance sheet - the bank is controlled by the Federal District government - to purchase at least R$12.2 billion in distressed loan portfolios from Banco Master at inflated prices, in exchange for the apartments and a remaining bribe balance that was never paid. Mendonça's decision describes Costa as a "veritable mandatário" of Vorcaro's interests inside the public bank.

The payments stopped in May 2025, according to the PF, after Vorcaro learned that the Federal Public Ministry had opened a secret investigation into the bribery. The Federal Police reconstructed the sequence from WhatsApp traffic: Felipe Mourão, referred to in the Master organization as "Sicário" and identified as part of the bank's intelligence nucleus, forwarded a copy of the confidential investigation to Vorcaro on June 24, 2025. Vorcaro then instructed Daniel Monteiro - a São Paulo attorney arrested alongside Costa and described by investigators as the "legal architect" who personally received R$86.1 million - to "travar tudo" and block the remaining transfers.

Costa's defense, led by attorney Cleber Lopes, calls the imprisonment "an exaggeration," denies any illicit receipt, and argues the former executive cooperated with authorities throughout his tenure. Monteiro's defense had not issued a public statement as of Wednesday evening.

BRB capital hike and the cost of the Banco Master scandal

While the STF voted, BRB shareholders - meeting in parallel on Wednesday - approved a capital increase of up to R$8.81 billion to stabilize the bank's Tier 1 ratio after writedowns on the Master portfolios. The bank trades on B3 under the BLSI3 ticker and is now led by Nelson de Souza, who was approved by the Central Bank in November 2025 after Costa's removal. BRB also remains under a Federal Justice order requiring a complete Central Bank audit of operations between 2024 and 2025.

Banco Master itself no longer exists as an operating institution. The Central Bank of Brazil liquidated the private-sector lender in November 2025 after the bribery investigation surfaced, citing imminent insolvency risk. Vorcaro was arrested on March 13 in an earlier phase of Compliance Zero and the Second Chamber of the STF ratified that earlier detention order on March 13 itself - he remains in preventive custody in São Paulo.

The Banco Master scandal arrives amid a broader credibility test for Brazilian banking supervision. Eight cyber incidents in 2025 diverted at least R$1.5 billion from the national payment system, and the Central Bank tightened rules on payment-infrastructure providers in late 2025. The Master-BRB case is now the largest bribery prosecution inside a Brazilian bank since the Banestado years, and the first in which a sitting state-controlled institution was used as the delivery vehicle for a private-sector liquidity rescue.

What the Friday STF deadline means

If Gilmar Mendes and Nunes Marques follow Mendonça and Fux, Costa's preventive custody will be ratified by a final panel vote on Friday night and the defense will have to seek release through a habeas corpus petition or await indictment. If either justice dissents, the case could be referred to the full plenary and Costa's continued detention would hinge on a broader vote. Mendes voted with Mendonça in the March 13 Vorcaro ratification but raised questions about PF operational choreography, so his posture on Friday is being watched closely by Brasília's legal community.

For international investors tracking Brazilian banking risk, the Banco Master scandal sits at the intersection of three structural issues - the Central Bank's post-2025 supervisory posture, the governance model of state-controlled commercial banks, and the criminal liability exposure of Brazilian bank boards when public-interest capital is used to absorb private-sector losses. A fuller picture of Brazil's banking sector in 2026 is set out in The Rio Times's 2026 outlook for global investors.

Costa's attorneys will challenge the preventive custody regardless of the panel outcome, but the political resonance of the Banco Master scandal now reaches beyond the defendants. The Compliance Zero investigation has publicly implicated additional political figures in peripheral roles, and Brazilian media have reported that the Federal Police investigation continues to map the financing networks connected to the Master group. The next 72 hours will determine whether Costa's case becomes the precedent for a wider prosecutorial sweep or remains an isolated prosecution inside a single institution.

Related coverage: Investing in Brazil 2026: A Guide for International Capital. Brazil Economic Outlook 2026: Definitive Guide

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The Rio Times

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