In September, the Brazilian real appreciated to around 5.3 per US dollar, marking its strongest level since June 2024, primarily due to robust performance in the Brazilian labor market, which supports a restrictive monetary policy stance. Concurrently, the US dollar weakened to a multi-month low. Unemployment in Brazil was recorded at 5.6% for the moving quarter ending in July, the lowest since data collection began in 2012, with an unemployed population close to 6.1 million and total employment reaching a historic 102.4 million. Inflation stood at 5.13% year-on-year in August, an unexpected decrease that alleviated the inflation risk premium on long-term yields. Despite this, the Selic rate remained steady at 15%, maintaining advantageous real interest differentials compared to major international counterparts. Simultaneously, the US dollar experienced a decline to its lowest point in over two months as market expectations included a potential 25 basis-point cut at the Federal Reserve’s upcoming meeting, alongside additional easing anticipated throughout the year, thereby lessening external pressure on the real.
FX.co ★ Brazilian Real at Over 1-Year High
Brazilian Real at Over 1-Year High
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