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Brazil Trade Balance
Brazil's trade balance measures the difference between its exports and imports of goods and services over a given period. A positive balance (surplus) means exports exceed imports; a deficit is the reverse.
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Why Trade Balance matters for BRL
Trade surpluses require foreign buyers to acquire brl to pay for Brazil exports, creating structural demand for the currency. Large and persistent deficits can create sustained downward pressure on the brl.
How to interpret this series
A widening trade surplus or a narrowing deficit is broadly brl-positive. A deteriorating trade balance—especially driven by weaker export volumes—may signal slowing global demand and can weigh on the brl.
Historical Trade Balance
Source: MDIC. Cadence: Monthly. Unit: USD bn. History from 2010-01-31 (16.4 years).
Recent announcements
Each release gets a durable child page so data, forecast, previous value, and raw fields can be cited directly.
Related Brazil indicators
Move to adjacent releases in the same macro category.
Business Confidence
Survey-based measure of business executives' outlook on economic conditions, production, and investment plans.
Consumer Confidence
Survey-based measure of consumers' confidence in economic conditions, employment prospects, and personal finances.
Core Inflation
CPI excluding volatile items like food and energy.
Current Account Balance
Measures trade in goods and services and income flows.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) Growth
GDP growth: the quarterly change in the inflation-adjusted value of all goods and services produced in the economy.
Inflation MoM
Month-over-month change in the consumer price index, measuring short-term inflationary momentum.
Inflation Rate (CPI/HICP)
Headline inflation: the year-over-year percentage change in the Consumer Price Index (CPI), the standard measure central banks target.
Producer Price Index (PPI)
Measures the average change over time in the selling prices received by domestic producers for their output.
Retail Sales
Measures change in the total value of sales at the retail level.
Trade-Weighted Index (NEER)
Nominal Effective Exchange Rate (NEER) measuring the value of a currency relative to a basket of trading partners' currencies, weighted by trade volumes. Published monthly by the BIS.
Common questions
Editorial context for readers and AI agents using this page as a cited country indicator source.
How does a trade surplus affect the brl?
Export revenues generate demand for the domestic currency as foreign buyers convert their currency to pay Brazil exporters. Persistent surpluses create structural buying pressure.