Key Facts
The Ibovespa fell 0.68 percent to 172,024 on June 30. That was a loss of about 1,181 points from the prior close near 173,205, by The Rio Times’ calculation.
The index swung between a high of 173,205 and a low of 170,538 before settling in the middle.
It closed June down about 1 percent and the second quarter down roughly 8 percent.
Petrobras led the losses as oil slipped; the big banks were soft.
The real firmed, with the dollar easing about 0.2 percent to around 5.16 reais.
Foreign investors kept withdrawing money, the session’s clearest theme.
Today’s Focus
Brazil closed a hard quarter on a sour note, slipping again while Wall Street celebrated its best first half in five years. For the second day in a row, the local market simply would not follow the good mood abroad.
The reason was closer to home. Weak budget figures and a steady drain of foreign money left Brazilian shares without a story strong enough to lift them.
01 A quarter to forget
The single session looks mild, but the backdrop is what stings. Brazilian stocks fell about 8 percent over the three months to June, a bruising quarter that wiped out much of the year’s earlier promise.
Even so, the first half still ended slightly positive, up under 7 percent, a reminder of how strong the opening months had been. The problem is momentum, which has clearly turned the wrong way.
The immediate cause on the day was ordinary profit-taking at quarter-end, as investors trimmed risk before turning the calendar. Underneath that, though, sits a more stubborn issue that has dogged the market for weeks.
02 Foreign money keeps leaving
That issue is the steady exit of overseas investors. Foreign funds pulled billions of reais out of Brazilian equities through June, and the flow has been hard to reverse.
Analysts describe a market struggling to build a positive narrative while outsiders wait on the sidelines. Without that foreign bid, rallies fade quickly and every wobble abroad hits harder.
It is why Brazil has now failed to track a rising Wall Street two days running. The American market ended a stellar half-year, yet none of that warmth reached Sao Paulo.
03 Fiscal worries return
Fresh government data gave the doubters more ammunition. Brazil’s gross public debt climbed to about 81 percent of the economy in May, higher than economists had expected.
The public sector also ran a wider budget shortfall than forecast, pushing the debt burden toward its highest in years. That revived a familiar worry about how much it costs the government to borrow.
Heavy public debt tends to keep interest rates higher for longer, which in turn makes shares less attractive against safer returns. It is the quiet weight that has sat on the market all year.
04 The heavyweights drag
The index’s biggest names did the damage. Petrobras led the fall as oil prices eased, with its shares down around 1 percent as global crude gave back ground.
Miner Vale slipped only slightly, cushioned by firmer iron ore prices in China, but it could not offset the weakness elsewhere. The big banks, which carry heavy weight in the index, were also soft.
There were bright spots on the margins, and futures tied to interest rates eased after the jobs data. Yet the leadership needed for a real recovery was missing.
Assessment — a market waiting for a reason to rise MEDIUM
The trend is soft and the story unconvincing while foreign money stays away and fiscal doubts linger. A firmer real and the prospect of steady rate cuts are the supports, but neither has yet been enough to turn sentiment.
05 The session in numbers
Measure
Level
Change
Read
Ibovespa
172,024
−0.68%
Sixth-month close, soft
US dollar (BRL)
5.16
real firmer
Dollar eased 0.2%
Day’s high
173,205
—
Early strength faded
Day’s low
170,538
—
Afternoon dip
Second-quarter change
—
−8%
A hard three months
First-half change
—
+6.8%
Still positive
Currency cells are signed by the direction of the local currency: a stronger real shows green, a weaker real red, whichever way the dollar quote moves.
Live Market IntelligenceBrazil — Live Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Brazil — Live Market Board
B3 · São Paulo
Jul 1, 2026 · 04:09
Ibovespa · benchmark
172,024
-0.68%
+23.89% over 12 months
Market breadth · 15 names
20% advancing
3 ▲ advancing12 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / BRL
5.18
+0.43%
EUR / BRL
5.91
-0.12%
Selic rate
14.25%
·
Brent crude
72.97
+0.07%
Iron ore
161.91
·
Sector heatmap · average move today
Materials
+0.18%
SUZB3
Utilities
+0.04%
ENEV3
Industrials
-0.71%
WEGE3, RENT3
Financials
-0.97%
ITUB4, BBDC4, BBAS3, B3SA3
Mining
-1.05%
VALE3, CSNA3, GGBR4
Energy
-1.39%
PETR4, PRIO3
Consumer Staples
-1.81%
ABEV3
Consumer Disc.
-2.72%
AZZA3
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
172,024
-0.68%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
66,967
-1.00%
S&P IPSAChile
10,840
+0.72%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,168,608
-0.26%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,269.08
-0.75%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
55,499.07
+1.21%
Full instrument board
InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
IBOV
172,024
-0.68%
+23.89%
173,205
—
—
—
USD/BRL
5.18
+0.43%
-4.53%
5.16
5.18
5.17
—
SELIC
14.25%
—
—
—
—
—
PETR4
37.80
-0.89%
+20.46%
38.14
38.18
37.74
31,940,700
VALE3
77.88
-0.32%
+47.92%
78.13
78.29
77.25
11,272,100
ITUB4
42.18
-0.54%
+17.58%
42.41
42.52
41.64
40,152,600
BBDC4
18.10
-0.39%
+7.55%
18.17
18.17
17.84
25,443,500
BBAS3
19.91
-1.73%
-9.87%
20.26
20.17
19.77
17,111,100
B3SA3
14.53
-1.22%
-0.34%
14.71
14.63
14.30
28,161,800
ABEV3
16.29
-1.81%
+22.30%
16.59
16.50
16.24
22,264,800
WEGE3
46.91
+0.26%
+9.65%
46.79
47.14
46.18
6,921,300
PRIO3
52.15
-1.88%
+23.00%
53.15
53.24
52.13
7,677,100
SUZB3
39.75
+0.18%
-22.38%
39.68
39.95
39.17
8,098,900
RENT3
41.54
-1.68%
+2.52%
42.25
41.97
41.06
7,226,100
AZZA3
17.88
-2.72%
-58.42%
18.38
18.30
17.63
2,549,200
CSNA3
4.62
-0.43%
-37.90%
4.64
4.66
4.50
12,315,300
GGBR4
20.78
-2.40%
+29.88%
21.29
21.16
20.74
8,890,700
ENEV3
26.72
+0.04%
+95.75%
26.71
26.76
26.04
7,222,600
Largest moves today
AZZA3
17.88
-2.72%
GGBR4
20.78
-2.40%
PRIO3
52.15
-1.88%
ABEV3
16.29
-1.81%
BBAS3
19.91
-1.73%
RENT3
41.54
-1.68%
B3SA3
14.53
-1.22%
PETR4
37.80
-0.89%
The session read
The Ibovespa eased 0.68%, with breadth negative — 3 of 15 names higher. Materials led, while Consumer Disc. lagged.
06 What to watch next
The new half-year opens with the same two questions hanging over the market. The first is whether foreign investors decide Brazilian shares are cheap enough to buy back, which would change the tone quickly.
The second is the path of interest rates, where a weak jobs market points to more gradual cuts ahead. Lower rates would eventually make shares more appealing than fixed returns.
A US jobs report later in the week is the big global marker, pulled forward before the July 4 holiday. Closer to home, any sign of firmer government finances would do more than anything to coax the outsiders back.
07 Connected coverage
For the prior session, see Brazil Stocks Pause at a Record as US Tech Bounce Reverses the Rotation Trade. For the wider picture, see the Global Economy Briefing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where did the Ibovespa close on June 30, 2026?
The Ibovespa fell 0.68 percent to 172,024 points, a drop of about 1,181 points. It was the last session of a difficult second quarter for Brazilian shares.
Why did Brazil fall while Wall Street rose?
For a second day running, Brazil could not follow a buoyant United States market. Foreign investors have been pulling money out, and weak domestic budget figures gave them little reason to return just yet.
What were the main drags on the index?
Petrobras led the losses as oil prices slipped, and the big banks were soft. Miner Vale fell only slightly, cushioned by firmer iron ore, but it was not enough to lift the wider market.
What did the fiscal data show?
Brazil’s gross public debt rose to about 81 percent of the economy, higher than expected, and the public sector ran a wider budget shortfall than forecast. That combination revived worries about the cost of government borrowing.
What is the outlook for interest rates?
A weak May jobs report, the softest of the year, strengthened the view that Brazil’s central bank will keep trimming its main rate in small steps. Many economists see it easing toward roughly 13.25 percent by the end of 2026.
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