Stock Market Investors Grow But Investment Shrinks in Brazil

Brazil's stock exchange Bovespa, From July to August, the number of natural people investing in the São Paulo Stock Exchange (Bovespa) rose by 320 people, from 528,769 to 529,089 investors. Still in August, corporate investors totaled 22,927 accounts, which represented 4.15% of the total base.

According to figures by the Brazilian Settlement and Custody Company, most of the natural people investors are from São Paulo, with 48.8%, followed by the state of Rio de Janeiro, with 25.36% and Minas Gerais, with 5.82%.

The study also shows that most are male, 76.34%. However, the number of women with capital invested in the stock market is on the rise. In 2002, women represented 17.63% of the total natural-person investor base, reaching 24.62% at the end of last year. In August 2008, the total rose 22.7%.

Despite the number of natural-person investors in the stock market, the financial volume has been falling. In the first half of the year, the total invested was 6.2 billion Brazilian reais (US$ 3.7 billion), in July it dropped to 5.6 billion reais (US$ 3.4 billion) and in August, to 4.8 billion reais (US$ 2.9 billion).

The Bovespa index on Tuesday reached 54,404 points, which represented a reduction of 1.37% over the previous day. This information was supplied by the Commodities & Futures Exchange (BM&F)/Bovespa.

Anba

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Honey Vendor Cuts European Middleman

Novo Mel, a Brazilian honey manufacturer, is preparing to enter the Arab market. The ...

Brazil’s 10-Years Global Bonds Get BBB- from Fitch

New York and London-based financial rating agency Fitch Ratings has assigned a rating of ...

Brazil’s Democratic Left Threatens to Leave the Workers Party

A new group of congressmen from Brazil’s Workers Party (PT, Partido dos Trabalhadores) who are ...

Violent Settlements Are Good for Brazil

"More than 90 percent of the settlers we interviewed were involved in a conflict ...

Obama Hasn’t Kept Promises on Latin America, Says Brazil’s Lula

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the president of Brazil, claims that his American counterpart, ...

In Brazil, IMF Only for a Rainy Day

Speaking to journalists at the Palácio do Planalto, December 23, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio ...

Brazil’s Sadia Wants to Take Over Perdigí£o. Offer Too Low, Says Perdigí£o

Brazilian food company Sadia has decided to purchase stock control of Perdigão, their main ...

Shrinking Lasted Only Three Months. Brazil Is Growing Again

The Brazilian economy grew at its fastest pace in over a year and a ...

Brazil Wants to Convert Foreign Debt into Education Funds

In July, at a meeting in Spain, Brazil plans to present a proposal to ...

Free Trade Starts at Home, Says Brazil

Brazil’s Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, said that the priority for Mercosur representatives ...