Markets
Key Facts
—The headline. Net foreign-exchange inflows reached $16.824bn in 2026 through July 3, on central bank data.
—The engine. The trade channel alone brought in $34.423bn, on exports of $158.805bn against imports of $124.382bn.
—The drain. The financial channel lost $17.599bn net, on purchases of $366.245bn against sales of $383.844bn.
—The turn. That channel was positive by $9.128bn in late February, a swing of nearly twenty-seven billion dollars.
—The peak. Cumulative inflows topped out at $18.004bn on June 12 and have shrunk since.
—The comparison. In all of 2024 the financial channel bled more than eighty billion dollars.
The Brazil FX flow numbers published this week carry a cheerful headline and a grim interior. More dollars entered the country than left, but the entire surplus, and then some, arrived in a ship.
The central bank publishes the figures weekly. According to its own statistical releases, the country ran a net inflow of nearly seventeen billion dollars in the year to the third of July.
Split that number in two and the picture changes. The trade channel delivered more than thirty-four billion dollars, while the financial channel lost almost eighteen.
Put plainly, the trade surplus is twice the size of the net inflow it produces. It funds the headline and then pays for the money investors are taking out.
What the Brazil FX flow split actually shows
The financial channel is the one that matters for confidence. It captures direct investment, portfolio money, profit remittances and interest payments, which is to say the decisions foreigners make about whether to stay.
At the end of February that channel was positive by more than nine billion dollars. By early July it had swung to a net outflow of nearly eighteen billion.
The reversal is close to twenty-seven billion dollars in four months. Nothing in the trade data changed to explain it, because the trade data only got better.
The gross figures show the scale of the churn. Foreigners bought more than three hundred and sixty-six billion dollars of currency and sold more than three hundred and eighty-three billion.
The deterioration was steady rather than sudden. The channel slipped into deficit by late March, was down nearly nine billion by mid-April, and past eleven billion by the middle of June.
The total has already peaked
Follow the cumulative line and a second problem appears. On the twelfth of June the year’s net inflow stood at eighteen billion dollars.
Three weeks later it had fallen back below seventeen. The headline figure is not merely flattered by trade; it is shrinking.
That timing is not mysterious. The collapse of the June truce between Washington and Tehran sent oil higher, global rates up and emerging-market risk appetite down.
Brazilian interest-rate futures rose sharply on Wednesday, and traders now put the odds of at least one American rate rise this year above eighty-five percent. Neither development encourages foreign capital to sit in reais.
Why this is not yet a crisis
Perspective is worth keeping. Two years ago the financial channel haemorrhaged more than eighty billion dollars across the year, and the real lost more than a quarter of its value.
This year’s outflow is a fraction of that, and the trade surplus is comfortably larger than the leak. The currency has held a little above five reais to the dollar rather than sliding.
There is also a technical caveat that honest reporting requires. These are contracted exchange operations, not the balance of payments, so they miss investment that never converts into reais.
A recent central bank rule now lets far more Brazilian companies hold dollars in domestic accounts without converting them. Some of what looks like an outflow may simply be money that no longer passes through the exchange desk.
What the Brazil FX flow means for investors
The structural read is uncomfortable all the same. A country whose external accounts depend on commodity prices is a country hostage to Chinese demand and to the weather.
Brazil ran that trade for a decade and it ended badly when prices turned. The difference between a strong exporter and a strong economy is the financial channel, and that is the one draining.
This year the export side has been unusually kind. Shipments reached nearly one hundred and fifty-nine billion dollars against imports of a hundred and twenty-four, a gap wide enough to disguise a good deal of trouble.
The counterpoint is real. Brazil remains the fifth-largest destination for foreign direct investment worldwide, on a stock approaching one trillion dollars, which suggests the long money is staying even as the short money leaves.
Watch the weekly releases for the rest of July. If the trade surplus keeps rising while the total keeps falling, the two lines will cross, and the cheerful headline will disappear.
Is the Brazil FX flow positive or negative?
Positive overall, but only because of trade. Through July 3 the country recorded a net inflow of almost seventeen billion dollars, made up of a trade surplus above thirty-four billion offset by a financial-channel outflow approaching eighteen billion.
Why does the financial channel matter more?
Because it measures choice rather than commodity prices. It covers direct and portfolio investment, profit remittances and interest payments, so a persistent outflow signals that foreign investors are reducing exposure to Brazil regardless of how much soy the country ships.
Should investors worry about the real?
Not immediately, since the trade surplus still exceeds the financial outflow by a wide margin and the currency has held its ground. The risk builds only if commodity revenues weaken while capital keeps leaving, a combination that hit Brazil hard in 2024.
View original source — Rio Times ↗
