Brazil Central Bank Buys Dollars In Futures First Time In 10 Years
| Indicator | Value |
|---|---|
| BCB futures purchase (May 6) | $500 million |
| Last comparable operation | November 2016 (Goldfajn) |
| Contracts placed | 10,000 (1 accepted bid) |
| Real YTD performance | +11% (best globally) |
| Selic rate | 14.75% (highest since 2006) |
| BCB swap stock | $95.75B |
| Stock reduction since Nilton David | over $7 billion |
| Spot dollar (May 6 close) | R$4.9207 |
| Brazil April FX flow | +$9.291B |
| 2025 dollar outflow (full year) | $33.3B (2nd-largest record) |
For more on the macro forces shaping Brazilian financial markets, see Brazil's all-time export record in April and our analysis of Argentina's country-risk drop near 500 on the Fitch effect.
What Happens Next-
Coming sessions: Market watching for repeat reverse-swap auctions to confirm structured programme.
Q2 2026: Continued real strength expected if oil prices stay high and Selic remains restrictive.
Mid-2026: If sustained, BCB swap stock could fall toward $80 billion from current $95.75 billion.
The Banco Central do Brasil bought $500 million in dollar futures on May 6 through a reverse-swap auction, the first such operation since November 2016 when then-governor Ilan Goldfajn ran a similar program. The auction placed 10,000 contracts equivalent to $500 million with only one bid accepted, taking the BCB to the buy-dollar / sell-reais side, paying the FX variation while receiving the local interest rate. The action helps reduce the existing $95.75 billion swap stock at a moment when the real has gained 11% year-to-date, the best performance among major currencies.
Why is the real so strong?Four forces converged: the Selic at 14.75% (highest since 2006) is drawing carry-trade flows from yield-seeking investors, the Copom's hawkish posture on Iran-war oil-driven inflation has reinforced rate differentials versus other emerging markets, foreign capital is reallocating away from US assets toward emerging-market sovereigns, and the Brazilian Treasury executed successful international issuances supporting credibility. The Ibovespa is near record highs at 184,718 points and Brazil's April FX flow showed +$9.291 billion in net inflows. The figure reverses 2025's $33.3 billion outflow, which was the second-largest in the historical series.
What does it mean for the swap stock?The BCB's existing swap stock stands at $95.75 billion, having declined by more than $7 billion since Nilton David took the monetary-policy directorate, with operations including the "casadão" trade selling spot dollars from international reserves while simultaneously buying via reverse swap. The May 6 auction marks the first standalone reverse-swap operation since 2016, and if the BCB extends it into a structured program, the swap stock could fall toward $80 billion by mid-2026. Analysts at Warren Rena, XP and Crédit Agricole expect that structured pattern as the next stage of FX policy.
What did analysts say?Daniel Manso, head of futures at Warren Rena, said the BCB will be more active than it has been, while Daniel Balaban of XP New York noted the $500 million was small but the signaling matters, with a structured repurchase program likely. Olga Yangol of Crédit Agricole called it a good strategy effectively absorbing excess dollar supply, and the 2016 precedent under Goldfajn ran for several months until interrupted by Trump's first election. Analysts expect a similar multi-month cycle this time, calibrated to real-strength signals rather than a single-shot operation.
Updated: 2026-05-08T18:30:00Z by Rio Times Editorial Desk
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