Brazil · Trade
Key Facts
—Sectors spared Coffee, beef, iron ore, aircraft parts and pharma inputs are among over 2,000 categories excluded from the US tariff, safeguarding top export earners.
—Sectors exposed Footwear, textiles, seafood, sugar, ethanol and pig iron remain subject to the 25% levy, threatening industrial exporters that rely on US demand.
—Industry alarm Fiesp and CNI warn the tariff directly harms Brazilian competitiveness and hurts companies in both countries, especially in higher-value-added goods.
—Negotiation path Brazil’s trade minister says the government will pursue a negotiated deal if the tariff proceeds, signaling diplomacy over immediate retaliation.
—Investor impact The split between exempted commodities and exposed manufactured goods creates a clear divergence in equity risk, margin pressure and supply-chain continuity.
More than 2,000 categories of Brazilian goods are exempted from the new 25% US tariff, shielding flagship exports such as coffee, beef and iron ore while leaving industrial sectors including footwear, textiles and ethanol fully exposed to the levy.
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 →
What the US tariff spares
The exemption list covers more than 1,600 product categories and protects a large share of Brazil’s exports to the United States by value. Confirmed spared sectors include coffee, beef and other meats, iron ore and other metals, pharmaceutical compounds, aircraft and aerospace parts, crude oil, rare earths, fertilizers, organic chemicals, fruits and nuts, and wood pulp.
Aircraft and aircraft parts are explicitly carved out, preserving a high-value bilateral trade flow.
For a foreign reader, it helps to understand that these exemptions are not random. They largely reflect products where the US itself has limited domestic capacity or where sudden supply disruption would ripple through American factories and consumer prices.
Iron ore, for instance, feeds US steel mills, while pharmaceutical inputs are essential for American drug manufacturing. Coffee and beef are everyday consumer staples where price spikes attract immediate political attention.
By carving out these categories, Washington is trying to apply pressure without hurting its own industrial base or triggering grocery-store inflation.
Which sectors remain exposed
The blanket 25% tariff applies hardest to goods left outside the exemption shields, according to trade-analysis data. Brazilian officials have named seafood, ornamental stone, timber, textiles and footwear as the most exposed sectors.
Reuters and official commentary confirm the levy threatens footwear, fishing and seafood, timber and wood products, textiles, sugar, pig iron, wood moldings and ethyl alcohol, commonly marketed as ethanol.
These are sectors where Brazil competes more directly with US manufacturers or where Washington believes it can absorb the shift without severe domestic pain. Footwear and textiles, for example, are labor-intensive industries where other Asian suppliers could theoretically fill the gap.
Ethanol is a particularly sensitive case because both Brazil and the US are major producers, and the two countries have a long history of trade friction over sugar-based versus corn-based ethanol. The inclusion of pig iron — a semi-finished steel product — signals that the tariff is also targeting intermediate industrial goods, not just finished consumer iteMs
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 16, 2026 · 04:50
Ibovespa · benchmark
176,010.90
-0.36%
+30.14% over 12 months
Market breadth · 15 names
40% advancing
6 ▲ advancing9 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / BRL
5.07
-0.14%
EUR / BRL
5.82
+0.14%
Selic rate
14.25%
·
Brent crude
84.65
-0.35%
Iron ore
161.91
·
Sector heatmap · average move today
Mining
+1.74%
VALE3, CSNA3, GGBR4
Materials
+0.90%
SUZB3
Financials
+0.22%
ITUB4, BBDC4, BBAS3, B3SA3
Energy
-0.15%
PETR4, PRIO3
Industrials
-0.17%
WEGE3, RENT3
Utilities
-0.81%
ENEV3
Consumer Disc.
-1.01%
AZZA3
Consumer Staples
-1.52%
ABEV3
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
176,010.90
-0.36%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
66,409.65
-0.18%
S&P IPSAChile
10,947.38
-0.70%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,291,246
+1.92%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,292.03
-0.29%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
57,174.37
—
Full instrument board
Instrument
Last
Change
YoY
Prev.
High
Low
Volume
IBOV
176,010.90
-0.36%
+30.14%
176,641.10
—
—
—
USD/BRL
5.07
-0.14%
-8.64%
5.08
5.08
5.07
—
SELIC
14.25%
—
—
—
—
—
PETR4
40.59
-0.17%
+27.04%
40.66
40.59
—
—
VALE3
74.51
+0.68%
+38.21%
74.01
74.51
—
—
ITUB4
43.14
-1.12%
+26.88%
43.63
43.14
—
—
BBDC4
18.60
-0.16%
+15.53%
18.63
18.60
—
—
BBAS3
20.55
-0.19%
-1.67%
20.59
20.73
20.43
14,716,900
B3SA3
15.69
+2.35%
+14.28%
15.33
15.85
15.42
36,695,600
ABEV3
15.57
-1.52%
+17.33%
15.81
15.57
—
—
WEGE3
44.26
+0.14%
+11.57%
44.20
44.26
—
—
PRIO3
57.50
-0.12%
+36.51%
57.57
57.50
—
—
SUZB3
41.48
+0.90%
-17.86%
41.11
41.48
—
—
RENT3
40.35
-0.47%
+9.32%
40.54
40.35
—
—
AZZA3
18.66
-1.01%
-48.45%
18.85
18.91
18.54
1,039,200
CSNA3
5.24
+0.77%
-35.15%
5.20
5.24
—
—
GGBR4
24.20
+3.77%
+46.93%
23.32
24.42
23.09
15,374,800
ENEV3
26.95
-0.81%
+100.07%
27.17
26.95
—
—
Largest moves today
GGBR4
24.20
+3.77%
B3SA3
15.69
+2.35%
ABEV3
15.57
-1.52%
ITUB4
43.14
-1.12%
AZZA3
18.66
-1.01%
SUZB3
41.48
+0.90%
ENEV3
26.95
-0.81%
CSNA3
5.24
+0.77%
The session read
The Ibovespa eased 0.36%, with breadth negative — 6 of 15 names higher. Mining led, while Consumer Staples lagged.
From The Rio Times
Related coverage · 16 Jul 2026
Brazil Coffee Exports Tumble 15.7% as 2025 US Tariff Shock Lingers
Read →
Industry warns of lost competitiveness
The Federation of Industries of São Paulo (Fiesp) said the proposed US tariff creates risks for Brazilian exports and directly harms competitiveness. The Brazilian National Confederation of Industry (CNI) told Reuters the tariff increase affects products where Brazil is a leading supplier to the US, including pig iron, wood moldings, cane sugar, ethanol and tobacco, and cautioned that the measure “harms companies in both countries.”
The concern from industry groups goes beyond the immediate cost increase. A 25% tariff can erase the profit margin on many manufactured goods, where competition is already tight.
For smaller Brazilian exporters without the financial cushion to absorb the levy or quickly redirect shipments to other markets, the risk is existential. The CNI’s warning that the measure hurts companies in both countries reflects a reality of integrated supply chains: a Brazilian shoe sold in the US often contains US-designed components or is distributed by American logistics firms, meaning the pain travels in both directions.
Why this matters for investors and expats
The exemption split creates a two-speed trade reality: companies exporting exempted commodities face little direct tariff disruption, while firms in exposed industrial sectors must price in higher costs, possible margin compression and supply-chain reorganization. For investors holding Brazilian equities or bonds tied to textile, footwear, sugar-ethanol or pig-iron producers, the risk of earnings downgrades and contract losses has risen materially.
For expats living in Brazil or those paid in reais, the tariff story matters in a less direct but still tangible way. A sustained hit to industrial exporters can weaken the Brazilian real over time, affecting the purchasing power of anyone earning in the local currency.
It can also slow job creation in manufacturing hubs, particularly in states like São Paulo, Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul where footwear and textiles are concentrated. On the other hand, the exemption for agricultural and mining commodities may cushion the broader economy, limiting the overall currency and employment shock.
Brazil pushes for negotiation
Brazil’s trade minister said the government will seek a negotiated deal if the US imposes the tariff, signaling a preference for diplomacy over immediate retaliation. Brasília views the exemption list as evidence that Washington recognizes the importance of Brazilian commodity flows to US industry, and it hopes to expand that logic to more exposed sectors.
This diplomatic approach is consistent with Brazil’s traditional trade posture. The country rarely opts for tit-for-tat tariff retaliation, preferring instead to use multilateral channels and direct negotiation.
The question now is whether the exemption list is a starting point for further carve-outs or a final offer. Brazilian diplomats will likely argue that products such as ethanol and pig iron are just as embedded in US supply chains as the exempted commodities, and that a broader exemption would serve both economies.
Whether Washington is open to that argument remains the central uncertainty for the weeks ahead.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which Brazilian exports are exempt from the new 25% US tariff?
Coffee, beef and other meats, iron ore, pharmaceutical inputs, aircraft and aircraft parts, crude oil, rare earths, fertilizers, organic chemicals, fruits and nuts and wood pulp are among the more than 1,600 product categories spared.
Which Brazilian products still face the 25% US tariff?
Footwear, textiles, apparel, seafood, timber and wood products, sugar, ethanol, pig iron and many machinery items are not exempt and remain fully subject to the levy.
How is Brazilian industry reacting to the US tariff proposal?
Fiesp says it harms export competitiveness, while CNI warns it affects products where Brazil is a top US supplier and damages firms in both countries. The government says it will seek a negotiated deal.
Sources: Reuters: Trump administration proposes 25% tariff to punish Brazil over trade practices, Agência Brasil: US government proposes new 25% tariff on Brazilian products, Global Trade Alert: Brazil Section 301 Proposed Tariff, Valor International: Brazil will seek negotiated deal if US imposes 25% tariff, TariffLens: Section 301 Brazil Tariffs, Fastmarkets: Potential impacts of US Section 301 tariffs on Brazil
View original source — Rio Times ↗


