Markets
Key Facts
—The caretaker. Vale’s board elected independent director Wilfred Theodoor Bruijn as interim chairman on July 14. He serves until the July 22 shareholder meeting.
—The exit. Daniel André Stieler resigned as chairman and director by letter on July 6, with immediate effect. His term ran to April 2027.
—The challenger. Previ, the Banco do Brasil employees’ pension fund, holds 7.01% and forced the meeting that was to vote on removing him.
—The board’s answer. A majority had recommended shareholders reject the removal, with one director against and three abstentions.
—The contest. Two directors want the chair: Manuel Lino Silva de Sousa Oliveira, backed by Previ, and vice-chairman Marcelo Gasparino. The company recommends neither.
—No owner. Vale has no controlling shareholder. Blackrock holds 6.71%, Mitsui 6.45% and Capital World 5.13%, with the rest dispersed.
The Vale board chairman seat has a temporary occupant whose term expires next Wednesday, and a regulator is now asking what it cost to empty it.
Vale’s directors met on Tuesday and elected one of their own, Wilfred Theodoor Bruijn, to hold the chair on a temporary basis. The company’s articles provide for this because the board’s rules name no automatic successor.
He gets eight days. On July 22 shareholders meet and choose for themselves.
One-stop reference
Company Intelligence
Every listed company in Latin America — financials, ownership and structure for 1,450+ companies across 26 exchanges, in one place.
Browse the directory →
How the Vale board chairman seat came open
Daniel André Stieler resigned on July 6 as both chairman and director, by letter, effective at once. He had sat on the board since 2021 and chaired it since 2023.
His mandate was due to run until April 2027, so he left roughly nine months early. The resignation came sixteen days before shareholders were to vote on removing him.
The pressure came from Previ, the pension fund of Banco do Brasil’s employees and one of Vale’s largest shareholders. It had formally requested the meeting to depose him.
The detail that makes this story is the provenance. Previ itself nominated Stieler to Vale’s board in 2021, and Stieler had chaired Previ until 2023.
Previ framed the move as routine renewal that would strengthen the board’s independence. Stieler did not accept that reading, and neither did most of his colleagues.
A board that fought back, on the record
Vale filed the minutes of its June 19 board meeting with regulators, and they are unusually raw for a company of this size. The board agreed unanimously to call the meeting, as the law requires when a qualifying shareholder asks, while a majority recommended shareholders vote the removal down.
Their stated grounds were an external governance review by Korn Ferry, which found the board had matured and fully adhered to Brazil’s corporate governance code. One director voted for removal and three abstained.
Stieler’s own defence argued that a shareholder demanding a change of chair to improve governance must show where governance failed. Absent that, he suggested, the vote risks being an abuse of voting power.
He also disputed Previ’s standing, noting the fund had cut its holding to seven point zero one percent. Vice-chairman Marcelo Gasparino went further, using the language of hostile takeovers.
One director, Márcio Antônio Chiumento, made the sharpest procedural point. He voted for removal and observed that Stieler should not have taken part in deliberating his own position.
Live Company IntelligenceVale SA ADR — the full investor dossierInside: live share price, market cap, three-year financials, valuation, ESG and peer benchmarks — plus the latest Rio Times coverage.
Rio Times · Live Ticker Intelligence
Vale SA ADR
VALE3 · B3 São PauloBasic MaterialsOther Industrial Metals & Mining
Share price · live
$74.01
▲ +1.59% today
Market cap
$61.6 bn
4.3 bn shares
P / E
21.9
EPS 0.66
Dividend yield
38.5%
$1.26 / share
The company
Employees
65,805
Headquarters
Rio De Janeiro
Listed since
2002
Website
Vale S.A., together with its subsidiaries, produces iron ore and nickel in Brazil, Asia, the Middle East, North Africa, Europe, the Americas, and Oceania. The company operates in two segments, Iron Ore Solutions and Vale Base Metals. It extracts, produces, and distributes iron ore, iron ore…
Financial performance · FY · BRL
RevenueNet income
2023
R$41.8 bn
R$8.0 bn
2024
R$38.1 bn
R$6.2 bn
2025
R$38.2 bn
R$2.5 bn
Net income declined to R$2.5 bn in 2025, from R$8.0 bn in 2023.
Valuation & returns
EBITDA margin
36.3%
Net margin
7.3%
Return on equity
6.8%
Price / book
1.68
Enterprise value
$77.9 bn
Revenue growth · YoY
+2.7%
Latest earnings
Q1 2026 — reported EPS 0.44 vs 0.50 expected
Missed −12%
Peers & comparators
CSNA3
▼ -0.76%
CMIN3
▼ -6.42%
IRON ORE
—
Data: EODHD Fundamentals & live feed · The Rio Times Ticker Intelligence
The exit payment the regulator is now examining
The resignation did not end the matter. Brazil’s securities regulator has opened a preliminary administrative proceeding into the circumstances of Stieler’s departure.
It followed a report in Valor Econômico suggesting the outgoing chairman had received a financial compensation tied to his exit. A shareholder also petitioned the regulator, invoking the article of Brazil’s corporations law that bars directors from granting benefits at the company’s expense without clear justification.
Vale answered on July 8, after the market closed, and denied the sequence outright. The company says the resignation was strictly personal and that no agreement, settlement or payment induced it.
On Vale’s account the causation runs the other way. Stieler decided to go, and only then did the parties negotiate a non-competition compensation contract, because the departure was unplanned while he led work on strategic matters still maturing.
That contract binds him for twenty-four months to non-competition, non-solicitation, non-disparagement and confidentiality. Vale told the regulator it saw no need to file the terms as a material fact, judging them incapable of moving the share price.
The company also said Stieler chose to go in the face of the position taken by its principal reference shareholder, and considered that the best interest of Vale. That single sentence concedes the pressure worked.
Why a chair fight matters at a company with no owner
Vale is a corporation in the Brazilian sense: no shareholder controls it. Previ’s seven percent, Blackrock’s six point seven one, Mitsui’s six point four five and Capital World’s five point one three together account for barely a quarter of the register.
In that structure the board is where power actually sits, and the chair sets its agenda. That is why a seat with no operating authority has produced two months of open warfare.
The political shadow is unavoidable. Previ belongs to Banco do Brasil, whose president is chosen by the government, and Vale spent 2024 fending off an attempt to place a former finance minister at its head.
Previ rejects that framing, describing itself as an institutional investor pressing for governance free of interference. Both descriptions can be argued from the same facts, which is precisely the problem.
Stieler’s resignation removed the vote on his removal but not the underlying contest. Shareholders still choose between Previ’s candidate and the sitting vice-chairman, with the company itself refusing to recommend either.
Who will be the next Vale board chairman?
Shareholders decide on July 22, choosing between Manuel Lino Silva de Sousa Oliveira, the lead independent director backed by Previ, and vice-chairman Marcelo Gasparino. Vale has pointedly declined to recommend either candidate, leaving the outcome to the register.
Does this change how Vale is run day to day?
Not directly, since the chair does not manage operations and the executive team is unchanged. What it decides is who sets the board’s agenda and how much sway a state-linked pension fund holds at a company with no controlling shareholder.
Why should a foreign investor care about this vote?
Vale is one of the largest weightings in Brazilian equity indices, so its governance is a proxy for how dispersed-ownership companies resolve power disputes there. The July 22 result will show whether a seven percent holder linked to a state bank can determine leadership over the objection of the board majority.
View original source — Rio Times ↗

