Latest News

Brazil's power companies retreat from trading amid rising risks

Sources and company executives claim that some Brazilian power companies are withdrawing from the energy trading market due to rising credit risk, increased price volatility, and shrinking sales from generators.

CPFL &?CTG Brasil are two of the major generators controlled Chinese groups that have stopped "directional trading" in which firms took long or short positions on price fluctuations to profit.

Local groups like Capitale, Urca, and Trinity have cut back or stopped trading operations.

Brazil's billions-dollar power trading market?operates via bilateral agreements without a central counterparty to monitor leverage. This makes reputation important, especially for independent investors who do not own assets in the power sector.

One sector executive who requested anonymity to discuss the issue freely said: "At some stage, you don't know who has good credit."

The trading retreat comes after a series failures in this sector over the past few years, most notably Gold Energia whose billions of real default in 2024 stunned the market and reshaped 'how participants assess risk.

The lower market liquidity also reflects the more cautious attitude of major generators like Copel and Axia, formerly Eletrobras. These companies have kept more energy unsold to take advantage of higher spot prices.

Another industry executive stated that the liquidity issues primarily affect small firms and those with weaker credit histories. For large generators and the banks, this market is normal. The source said that this is a "natural shakeout".

CHINESE MAJOR RETREAT

CPFL said in a press release that it was focused on selling the electricity generated by its assets and reducing risks associated with Brazilian trading.

CTG announced that it would close?its dedicated trade subsidiary in the second quarter of 2024 as a "strategic decision" aligned to its market position.?Additionally, CTG stated that commercial activities were expanding with new wind and solar project coming online.

Daniel Rossi, CEO of Capitale, said that the company has been operating "consciously smaller" than it was in 2024. It expects to reduce its traded volume by 30 percent in 2026.

It's impossible to continue operating the same way as before, with the current restrictive pricing model and the volatility levels. Rossi added that the company was focusing on only "small opportunities" and would have taken on too much risk.

According to CEO Joao Santes, Trinity Energia now trades about 10% of the energy that it used to, a company which traded two gigawatts a month on average. Urca Trading also decided to reduce its exposure by 2025 in order to avoid "systemic risk," the company said. Reporting by Leticia fucuchima Editing Rod Nickel

(source: Reuters)