The Brazilian real was little changed against the US dollar on Tuesday as investors balanced local monetary policy signals with new labour market data in the United States.

Meanwhile, market actors focused on the minutes from the Central Bank’s most recent policy meeting, as well as the US report for November jobs, which combined to shareholders ‘ interest rates and capital flows expectations.

According to local media outlet InfoMoney, around 10:44 a.m., the spot dollar rose 0.36%, to 5.443 reais on the sale.

In derivatives, the January dollar futures contract, Brazil’s B3 exchange’s most fluid contract, gained 0.43% to 5.456 reais.

The muted moves mirrored an overall cautious market tone as traders weighed external factors with local policy cues.

Central bank operations and policy signals

Later in the morning, the Central Bank planned to arrange an auction of 50,000 currency swap contracts to roll over positions maturing on January 2.

Investors are constantly monitoring such activities for any potential influence on short-term exchange rate fluctuations and liquidity constraints.

The draft statement presented with the minutes of the Central Bank’s most recent meeting emphasised gains from what it described as prudent interest rate management.

The text emphasised monetary policy’s critical role in moderating price increases and reaffirmed a clear commitment to meeting the inflation objective.

This statement reinforced expectations that authorities will maintain a restrictive stance for the foreseeable future, even as inflation pressures ease.

Copom minutes temper rate cut expectations

Analysts saw the Copom minutes as indicating patience rather than an impending shift to decrease borrowing prices.

According to Paula Zogbi, chief strategist at Nomad, the cautious tone suggests a determination to postpone the commencement of a Selic rate decrease cycle while waiting for more economic data.

According to her, this method might depress demand for Brazilian equities while retaining the interest rate gap that helps keep the country attractive to foreign capital flows.

Similarly, Lauro Sawamura Kubo, an investment fund manager at Patagonia Capital, observed that the minutes indicate the necessity to continue the era of tight monetary policy.

Expectations for speedier interest rate decreases have been put back, with easing possible only at the end of the first quarter or the beginning of the second.

These interpretations contributed to the real’s rather consistent performance, as the currency continued to benefit from high domestic interest rates despite uncertainty about the timing of policy adjustments.

US labour data and global dollar movements

Internationally, the focus shifted to US labour statistics, which reported an increase of 64,000 jobs in November, 14,000 above the market consensus of 50,000.

Meanwhile, the jobless rate increased to 4.6%, well above the expected 4.4%. Mixed data muddied the US policy outlook, keeping investors closely monitoring developments.

The dollar hovered close to multi-week lows against the euro and the yen as participants awaited additional economic signs from the US that could shape the outlook on the Federal Reserve’s next move.

Globally, central banks’ decisions are also in focus with policy meetings this week from the ECB and Bank of England on Thursday, and the BoJ decision on Friday.

Fed Funds futures contracts were pricing in a 75.6% chance that interest rates will remain steady at the Federal Reserve’s next meeting on January 28, according to CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

The prospect of sustained US interest rates offered another layer of stability to global currency markets, including the real.

Balancing home and external forces

Taken together, cautious guidance from Brazil’s Central Bank and a difficult global environment contributed to keeping the real near current levels.

Investors continued to evaluate the benefits of Brazil’s interest rate differential against worries about the global economy and monetary policy, keeping the currency mostly stable throughout the trading session.

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