Brazilian Foreign Reserves at Record US$ 233 Billion

Dollars in Brazil Foreign reserves for Brazil reached US$ 232.9 billion at the end of October, up from US$ 224.2 billion at the end of the previous month. In the first ten months of 2009, reserves were up 26.1 billion. Reserves ended last year at 206.8 billion.

Reserves grew sharply from 2005 through mid-2009 after the central bank started purchasing dollars from the spot market in October 2005. Reserves were at US$ 53.78 billion at the end of 2005.

The level declined beginning in October 2008 as the central bank loaned dollars to Brazilian businesses in the face of the global credit crunch. The central bank also sold dollars directly from the reserves to the foreign exchange market via spot auctions.

However with returning global financing, Brazil in October posted its highest monthly foreign exchange inflows for the year so far. According to the central bank, net foreign exchange inflows in October totaled US$ 14.60 billion, up from US$ 4.64 billion in outflows reported in the same month last year.

Central bank data showed heavy investment inflows during October, while trade inflows remained moderate. Net investment inflows during the period totaled US$ 13.11 billion, while the country registered net trade inflows of US$ 1.49 billion.

The central bank said the net trade result in October was based on US$ 14.30 billion in export receipts and US$ 12.81 billion in import payments overseas. Incoming investment, meanwhile, totaled US$ 39.71 billion, while investment outflows totaled US$ 26.59 billion.

Analysts note Brazil saw strong flows of incoming investment in October as a result of local share offers and overseas debt sales by local companies. Among highlights during the month was an initial public share offer by Banco Santander, which raised more than US$ 6 billion.

The foreign exchange flow figures reported on Wednesday brought Brazil's year-to-date net inflows of US$ 22.86 billion, compared with US$ 12.55 billion in inflows reported during the same period a year earlier.

Brazil in 2008 posted net foreign exchange outflows of US$ 983 million, compared with record US$ 87.45 billion in net inflows reported during 2007. The annual net foreign exchange outflows in 2008 were the first posted by the country since 2002.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Drug patent

Group Asks US Congress to Punish Brazil and Thai Drug Piracy

An American group called USA For Innovation released an open letter to Members of ...

Brazilian Fruit Exports Get Push and Money from Government

Brazil’s Export Promotion Agency (Apex – Brasil) and the Brazilian Fruit Institute (Ibraf) concluded ...

Brazilian Gasoline Gets Back Its 25% Alcohol Addition

Brazil has two kinds of sugarcane-based ethanol. There is a pure ethanol. And there ...

Abu Dhabi Buys Shares on Santander Brazil’s Initial Public Offering

The biggest shareholder in Daimler AG, publicly listed Abu Dhabi fund Aabar Investments PJSC, ...

Terror Before Brazil Air Crash: ‘Slow Down!’, ‘I Can’t!’

A Brazilian congressional inquiry on Brazil's deadliest air accident last month, which left 199 ...

Brazil Is Good at Urging for Open Markets… Abroad

This primarily is an opportunity for me to consult with a close and important ...

Brazil Uses Technology as Weapon of Social Inclusion

Brazil’s Ministries of Science and Technology, and of Social Development and Hunger Alleviation, in ...

Brazil and US Hold 16-Country War Games in Brasí­lia

The armed forces of sixteen American nations have begun computer simulated training exercises in ...

Epitaph

She took a notebook and with the flame of a lighter she lighted up ...

Huge Shadow of Lula Is Just One of Many Challenges for Brazil’s New President

Dilma Rousseff became on Sunday Brazil’s first woman president and the first former guerrilla ...