Exporters are banking on higher Chinese demand as the Latin American country looks for new trade opportunities.
Brazil's President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva will meet with Russia’s Vladimir Putin in Moscow and China’s Xi Jinping in ...
“Brazil is in a privileged situation,” he told the Financial Times in an interview ahead of a trip to Europe. Haddad said he ...
Sweeping U.S. tariffs could prove relatively advantageous for Brazil, Latin America's largest economy, despite President ...
Not even America’s closest trading partners were spared by a policy broadside that spooked investors and left policymakers ...
Brazil Finance Minister Fernando Haddad said on Tuesday that his country would maintain its openness to negotiate with the ...
Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva will meet with Russia’s Vladimir Putin in Moscow and China’s Xi Jinping in Beijing, two important partners for the South American giant, in May ...
Since overtaking the U.S. as Brazil’s biggest trading partner in 2009, China has invested more than $70 billion in the Latin American country, courting business leaders and politicians alike.
China is Brazil’s top trading partner. In 2024, it accounted for 28% of Brazil’s exports and supplied 24.2% of the country’s imports. The United States ranked second, providing 12% of Brazil ...