Brazil · Markets
Key Facts
—The action. The US Treasury sanctioned two Brazilians and four companies on July 1 over ties to the PCC crime gang.
—The network. Treasury says the ring laundered more than $30 million of US drug proceeds back to Brazil using cryptocurrency.
—The names. The targets include São Paulo firms Victory Trading, Pixwave and Wave, plus a Portuguese company near Lisbon.
—The timing. It is the first US sanction on PCC figures since Washington branded the gang a terrorist group in June.
—The market. Brazil’s real weakened about one percent against the dollar on the day of the announcement.
—The reach. Any US assets of those named are frozen, and firms half-owned by them are blocked too.
The latest round of PCC sanctions is small in dollar terms, but it is the first proof that Washington’s new terrorist label for Brazil’s biggest gang now comes with real enforcement teeth.
The US Treasury moved on Wednesday against a money-laundering ring tied to the Primeiro Comando da Capital, Brazil’s largest criminal organisation. The action named two Brazilian citizens and four companies.
For foreign investors and companies doing business in Brazil, the detail that matters is the timing, not the sum. This is enforcement in a new legal era.
What the PCC sanctions target
According to the Treasury’s July 1 release, the ring laundered more than thirty million dollars of drug money earned in the United States and moved it back to Brazil using cryptocurrency. The network ran out of Florida and São Paulo.
Washington named Victor Henrique de Oliveira Shimada as the head of the São Paulo side, and a relative, Stella Stefanie Nunes Henrique de Oliveira, as his logistics broker. The FBI had already arrested six members of the Florida cell in January.
Four firms were blocked alongside the pair. Three sit in São Paulo, the financial-services companies Victory Trading and Wave and the construction firm Pixwave, while a transport company, Avenidas Flutuantes, is based near Lisbon in Portugal.
One name carries an unusual backstory. Treasury says Victory Trading was used in early 2025 to launder money stolen from a Brazilian football club in an advertising-fraud scheme, a reminder of how deeply such networks reach into everyday business.
Why these PCC sanctions matter to investors
The bigger story is the shift in legal footing. In late May, the United States labelled the PCC a terrorist organisation, a status that took effect in early June and put the gang in the same category as groups like Hezbollah.
This is the first sanction on PCC figures since that label landed. Lawyers had warned companies to expect tougher enforcement, and this action shows the warning was not theoretical.
The practical exposure is wide. All US assets of those named are frozen, any firm they own at least half of is automatically blocked, and foreign banks that handle their transactions risk secondary sanctions of their own.
That is why a modest laundering case moved the currency. Brazil’s real slipped about one percent against the dollar as traders weighed the compliance risk now attached to any hidden criminal link in a supply chain or deal.
The politics add a further layer. Brazil’s government opposes the terrorist label, calling the gangs a domestic law-enforcement matter, so each new US action also lands inside a tense moment in relations between the two countries.
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 · 14:30
Ibovespa · benchmark
171,868
-0.09%
L 169,666day rangeH 172,098
+23.16% over 12 months
Market breadth · 14 names
64% advancing
9 ▲ advancing5 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / BRL
5.19
+0.63%
EUR / BRL
5.91
-0.07%
Selic rate
14.25%
·
Brent crude
71.30
-2.22%
Iron ore
161.91
·
Sector heatmap · average move today
Materials
+1.31%
SUZB3
Financials
+0.43%
ITUB4, BBDC4, BBAS3, B3SA3
Mining
+0.39%
VALE3, CSNA3, GGBR4
Energy
+0.27%
PETR4, PRIO3
Consumer Staples
+0.18%
ABEV3
Industrials
-0.50%
WEGE3, RENT3
Consumer Disc.
-1.06%
AZZA3
Utilities
-1.20%
ENEV3
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
171,868
-0.09%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
67,260
+0.44%
S&P IPSAChile
10,840
+0.72%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,114,544
-1.71%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,268.57
-0.02%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
55,499.93
+0.00%
Full instrument board
Instrument
Last
Change
YoY
Prev.
High
Low
Volume
IBOV
171,868
-0.09%
+23.16%
172,024
172,098
169,666
—
USD/BRL
5.19
+0.63%
-4.34%
5.16
5.22
5.17
—
SELIC
14.25%
—
—
—
—
—
PETR4
37.76
-0.11%
+19.85%
37.80
37.84
37.40
11,031,600
VALE3
78.16
+0.36%
+46.23%
77.88
78.92
77.04
9,321,200
ITUB4
42.57
+0.97%
+18.21%
42.16
42.80
41.47
16,093,600
BBDC4
18.16
+0.44%
+8.75%
18.08
18.22
17.84
39,678,800
BBAS3
19.93
+0.10%
-9.08%
19.91
19.99
19.56
7,298,200
B3SA3
14.56
+0.21%
+0.28%
14.53
14.59
14.20
23,381,200
ABEV3
16.32
+0.18%
+21.90%
16.29
16.39
16.09
9,205,100
WEGE3
46.63
-0.60%
+9.76%
46.91
47.13
46.10
2,180,100
PRIO3
52.49
+0.65%
+25.57%
52.15
52.50
51.36
3,357,800
SUZB3
40.27
+1.31%
-20.89%
39.75
40.40
39.43
2,819,600
RENT3
41.38
-0.39%
+1.85%
41.54
41.65
40.27
2,000,800
AZZA3
17.69
-1.06%
-56.96%
17.88
18.12
17.51
1,563,900
CSNA3
4.62
+0.00%
-38.48%
4.62
4.70
4.49
6,326,600
GGBR4
20.95
+0.82%
+30.94%
20.78
21.01
20.49
2,757,500
ENEV3
26.40
-1.20%
—
26.72
26.58
26.03
2,643,100
Largest moves today
SUZB3
40.27
+1.31%
ENEV3
26.40
-1.20%
AZZA3
17.69
-1.06%
ITUB4
42.57
+0.97%
GGBR4
20.95
+0.82%
PRIO3
52.49
+0.65%
USD/BRL
5.19
+0.63%
WEGE3
46.63
-0.60%
The session read
The Ibovespa eased 0.09%, with breadth positive — 9 of 14 names higher. Materials led, while Utilities lagged.
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A pattern of escalating pressure
This marks the third US action against the PCC. Washington first designated the gang itself in December 2021 and sanctioned a senior money launderer in March 2024, so the reach has widened each time.
The Treasury also flagged a separate scheme that used a Chinese electronics network to launder more than one hundred and ninety million dollars in seven months. The message to global firms is that the gang’s money moves through ordinary commerce.
The case was built by a joint task force drawing on the FBI’s Miami office and the US Justice Department. That coordination signals a more systematic American campaign against the money networks behind the gang, not a one-off listing.
Treasury acted under two executive orders, one aimed at illicit-drug networks and one at terrorist supporters. The dual legal basis is what gives the move its unusual bite for banks and companies abroad.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the PCC?
The Primeiro Comando da Capital is Brazil’s largest criminal organisation, born in São Paulo prisons and now the biggest such group in the Western Hemisphere. It runs drug trafficking and money laundering across dozens of countries.
Why do these PCC sanctions matter for companies in Brazil?
Because the gang is now a designated terrorist group, dealing with it even indirectly can trigger US sanctions and asset freezes. Firms with Brazilian operations face fresh pressure to screen partners, suppliers and clients for hidden links.
Did the PCC sanctions move markets?
Brazil’s real weakened roughly one percent against the dollar on the day of the announcement, as investors priced in the compliance risk that now attaches to any criminal nexus in a Brazilian deal or supply chain.
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