Client Affairs
New Freedoms For Brazilian Investors To Hold Foreign Assets Take Effect
The Latin American country has brought in new freedoms on how much money its wealthier citizens can hold in foreign assets.
Wealthy Brazil-based investors can now hold more foreign assets
in their portfolios after new rules that had been delayed finally
kicked into gear yesterday.
The Brazilian Securities Commission, or Comissão de Valores
Mobiliários, known as CVM for short, has brought in new rules
that widen investor freedoms significantly.
CVM’s Normative Ruling No. 554 sets out new terms for what are
deemed to be “qualified investors” and creates the new
classification of “professional investor”; the second rule,
called 555, sets out new rules on how investment funds are
managed, operated and reported.
Figures from the Brazilian asset management sector, attending a
recent conference in Luxembourg, told this publication that the
rules should see more flows into foreign assets, coming at a time
when Brazilian investors are seeking alternatives to an embattled
domestic equity market that has been hit by Brazil’s economic
slowdown.
Under the changes, as explained by law firm Levy and Salomãdo,
investments in assets located outside of Brazil may be equal to
up to 20 per cent of their net worth, double the older cap of 10
per cent. On the other hand, the investment funds addressed
to professional investors may invest up to 100 per cent of their
net worth in assets located abroad. To count as a professional
investor, the person must have more than R10 million (around $2.5
million) of investments.