The post EWZ Could Be 2026’s Sleeper Trade, If Brazil’s Rate Cuts Don’t Get Derailed appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
The setup for iShares MSCI Brazil ETF (NYSEARCA:EWZ) in 2026 only looks obvious in hindsight. Brazil’s central bank spent much of last year holding the Selic at 15%, one of the highest real rates in the world, and has now started cutting with a cautious 25-basis-point move.
EWZ is up roughly 11% year to date and about 24% over the past year, which sounds like the sleeper has already woken up. It hasn’t, really. EWZ still trades near $35, only about 27% higher than it was five years ago. The question is whether the next leg belongs to you.
EWZ is a single-country vehicle tracking the MSCI Brazil 25/50 Index with 56 holdings and $8.95 billion in assets. It charges 0.59%, which is expensive for an index fund and cheap for the exposure you can’t easily replicate.
The portfolio leans hard into financials (Itau, Bradesco, Nubank), commodity producers (Vale, Petrobras), and consumer names, so the return engine is really three things stacked on top of each other: Brazilian corporate earnings, the price of iron ore and oil, and the direction of the real against the dollar. It pays a semi-annual distribution, most recently about $0.33 per share, though the yield swings meaningfully with commodity cycles.
Emerging-market rate cuts have historically been a strong tailwind for local equities, and Brazil’s setup is close to textbook: high real rates coming down, cheap valuations, and a low-volatility global backdrop with the VIX near 16. Options flow noticed.
On June 12, EWZ traded 1.01 million contracts at a 0.60 put-call ratio, a bullish tilt that hasn’t shown up in mainstream coverage. But the scorecard is mixed. Over ten years EWZ is up about 89%, which trails what a boring S&P 500 index fund did in roughly half that time. Brazil is a tactical trade dressed up as a country allocation, and the multi-year chart proves it.
With U.S. 10-year yields at 4.48%, the carry math still favors Brazil as long as Copom keeps easing faster than the Fed. That is the whole trade in one sentence.
EWZ makes sense as a 3% to 5% tactical sleeve inside a diversified portfolio, sized so that a 25% drawdown is annoying but not portfolio-defining. If your reason for owning it is “Brazilian rate cuts plus cheap multiples plus commodity optionality,” you have a coherent thesis and a clear exit: the day Copom pauses or the tariff investigation escalates.
If you want steady income, low volatility, or a set-and-forget core holding, this fund will make you miserable. It is a bet, priced like one, and it should be sized like one.
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The post EWZ Could Be 2026’s Sleeper Trade, If Brazil’s Rate Cuts Don’t Get Derailed appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

