News from Brazil’s central bank and global commodity markets sets the tone for the Brazilian real this week. On April 24, 2025, the real trades at 5.7044 per dollar, its strongest in nearly three weeks.

This follows a modest 0.26% gain on April 23, when the real closed at 5.7041 per dollar. The currency’s recent stability comes after months of v

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The crypto market saw significant volatility and major moves over the past 24 hours, with Bitcoin (BTC) leading the charge and altcoins following with mixed but notable performances. The overall sentiment is bullish, driven by institutional activity, ETF inflows, and regulatory optimism.

Bitcoin (BTC)

  • Current Price: ~$92,735
  • 24h Change: -0.61%
  • Market

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Brazil’s B3 closed higher on April 23, 2025, as the Ibovespa index rose 1.34% to 132,216 points. This move followed a volatile period marked by uncertainty over US trade policy.

The news comes from recent market data and official statements. Traders in São Paulo responded to US President Donald Trump’s announcement that he would not remove Federal R

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Argentina's private-sector employees now earn genuine incomes at their greatest level because 2017, marking a pivotal shift after a 16% decline in between 2017 and 2023. President Javier Milei's aggressive reforms-- consisting of slashing public costs by 30%, eliminating currency controls, and decontroling markets-- have stabilized inflation from 272% in 2023 to 117.8

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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecasts Brazil's gross public financial obligation will rise to 92% of GDP in 2025, nearing 100% by 2029, placing the nation in a fiscal league generally inhabited by sophisticated economies like the U.S. and France.This trajectory, as laid out in the IMF's October 2024 Fiscal Monitor, represents a sharp wear and tear from p

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Mexico's public debt has surged to 60.7% of GDP in 2025, its greatest level because 2019, driven by increasing borrowing costs, currency volatility, and acquired fiscal challenges from the previous administration.The International Monetary Fund (IMF) validated the figure, pointing out tighter global credit conditions and Mexico's raised deficit spending as k

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