Latest News

Brazil's trade surplus in April jumps 38% due to a rise in oil and soy exports

Brazil's trade surplus in April jumped 37.5% from a year earlier to $10.5 billion. This was a record for that month. The government revealed the data on Thursday. It was boosted by the strong shipments of important commodities such as soybeans, crude oils, iron ore, and beef.

However, the result was lower than the median estimate of $10.9 billion in an economist's poll.

According to the Ministry of Development, Industry, Trade and Services, exports increased?14.3% compared to a year ago, to $34.1 billion.

Exports rose by 18.8% in value, with soybeans, crude oils, iron ore, and beef all increasing by 10.6% in value.

Imports rose 6.2% to $23.6 billion in April.

Brazil's first-quarter trade surplus increased by?43.5%, to $24.8 billion.

Analysts are revising up their predictions for the country's?trade surplus?this coming year due to the pressure on oil prices caused by the?U.S. and Israel war against Iran. Brazil is Latin America's biggest economy and an agricultural powerhouse. It also happens to be a net oil exporter.

Last month, the government forecast a trade surplus in 2026 of $72.1 billion. However, it noted that the estimate did not factor in the effect of higher oil prices throughout the remainder of the year. (Reporting and editing by Paul Simao; Marcela Ayres)

(source: Reuters)