Why I Like Brazilian Bonds Right Now

By Gary Scott

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Multi currency investments can reap rich rewards right now. Take, for example, this multi currency Brazilian investment. The recent drop in U.S. dollar interest rates means you can now borrow dollars at between 4.175% and 4.875%.

Brazil’s currency, the real, makes sense for multi currency diversification because Latin America is the fastest growing emerging region.

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You can borrow U.S. dollars to make multi currency investments from Jyske Bank at rates a bit above and below 4.5% depending on the amount borrowed.

You can also buy Brazilian bonds that yield around 11%.

For example, earlier this month Jyske Bank offered these two Brazilian government bonds:

* Brazil 12.5% maturing 2016 yield 10.9%

* Brazil 12.5% maturing 2022 yield 11.0%

If you invest $100,000 (the minimum for a leveraged account) and borrow $100,000 at 4.5%, investing both the loan and original investment in Brazil, with $100,000 in each of these bonds…your average return after fees will be about 10%. That works out to $20,000 a year income on $100,000 invested…or 20% per annum.

Plus, the Brazilian currency has appreciated enormously versus the U.S. dollar. This could add an extra profit.

Yes, there is risk. The U.S. dollar/real rate could also create a loss.

For example, in the last year, the dollar has dropped versus the real until March. Now the dollar is having a mild recovery. Had you made the investment above in March, you would have experienced some downward pressure on your loan.

Plus, there is always the risk that interest rates could rise, which will reduce the value of the bonds. Brazil’s investment rating could fall. Dollar interest rates can rise. Any of these events would reduce profits and could even create a loss.

These risks are why you should never leverage to invest in currencies more than you can afford to lose.

On the other hand, compare the risk premium. The leveraged Brazilian bonds pay you 20% per annum to take this risk.

But there is risk in holding any investment. The investment that is deemed the safest in the world, U.S. Treasury bonds, has risk. Inflation can (and has for the past 40 years) chew the bond’s purchasing power to pieces.

On the same day that the Brazil bonds paid 11%, the 10-year U.S. bond paid 3.59%.

Add this up for ten years. The Brazilian bonds pay you 20% per annum–that’s 200% over ten years. The Treasury bonds pay 3.59% or 35.9% in total.

Are the Brazilian bonds that risky, we must ask?

The overall picture is not quite this simple but these numbers reflect the general idea.

There are ways to make this type of investing safer such as borrowing more than one currency and/or investing in more than one type of bond. For example, a yen and dollar loan invested in Russian, Turkish, Brazilian, Indonesian, and South African bonds spreads the risk and increases the risk premium.

Gary Scott
For International Living

Editor’s Note: Gary Scott, long-time friend of IL, has been analyzing and writing about global investments for more than 30 years. His multi-currency education service which you can buy today for a dollar teaches individuals how to create their own global, value-oriented investment portfolio that can take advantage of opportunities U.S. investors are often unaware of. Gary will explore this in more detail when he speaks at International Living’s “Ultimate Event” in Cancun, Mexico, May 28-31.

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About the Author

Gary ScottGary Scott, long-time friend and contributing author of International Living, has been analyzing and writing about global investments for more than 30 years. Gary was one of the first publishers to suggest global investing. May 2008 is the 40th anniversary of his reporting on international investments. Gary is an entrepreneur, author and investment publisher who began writing about multi currency portfolios four decades ago when many thought he was crazy. Finally decades late, the establishment is on the bandwagon.

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There Is 1 Response So Far. »

  1. I really enjoyed this article. But one thing I’d like to know: where can US average-Joe investor buy Brazilian bonds cheaply? My Brazilian boss buys them through his bank account in Brazil, but that’s not too feasible for guys like me.

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