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Brazil Opens Stock Market Data Pipeline to Chinese Investors

A new link between B3 and Wind Financial Terminal will put Brazilian market data in front of major Chinese financial institutions. The initiative was launched during Finance Minister Dario Durigan's official visit to China.

Finance professionals reviewing Brazilian market data on trading screens in Shanghai

Brazil is giving Chinese investors a more direct view of its capital markets, in a move designed to deepen financial ties with the country's largest trading partner.

On Wednesday, June 24, Brazilian Finance Minister Dario Durigan joined the launch of a partnership in Shanghai that will place data from B3, Brazil's stock exchange, inside Wind Financial Terminal, China's leading financial information platform. The system is widely used by Chinese asset managers, banks, insurers and brokerage houses.

For Brazil, the significance is practical as much as diplomatic. Market data often determines whether international investors can compare opportunities, price risk and allocate capital with confidence. By making information on Brazilian assets available through a platform already embedded in China's financial industry, the government is trying to lower one of the barriers between Chinese capital and Brazilian investment opportunities.

A clearer window into Brazilian assets

The integration will give institutional users in China access to several categories of Brazilian market information. According to the Ministry of Finance, the data set includes asset prices, market indices, trading statistics, reference information and historical series.

That matters because global investors rarely enter a market on political goodwill alone. They need reliable data, comparable benchmarks and enough trading history to judge liquidity and volatility. Brazil's officials see the Wind connection as a way to make the country's listed assets easier to analyse from China, without requiring investors to seek out separate data channels.

Durigan framed the initiative as part of a broader effort to make Brazil more visible and investable for overseas institutions.

"Brazil has established itself as a safe and dynamic haven for foreign capital. By integrating B3 data into China's leading financial platform, we are building a transparent bridge that provides Asian investors the tools they need to actively participate in our growth," he said ahead of the Shanghai event.

The Brazilian government expects the partnership to help broaden the sources of funding available to the economy. It also hopes that easier access to local market information will increase the participation of Chinese investors in Brazil, particularly in areas the government considers strategic.

Finance, climate and a wider China agenda

The platform launch is one element of Durigan's official mission to China, which includes meetings in Shanghai and Beijing and runs through Friday, June 26. The visit is focused on expanding economic cooperation between the two countries, with financial markets high on the agenda.

The Ministry of Finance said discussions during the mission cover financing instruments, sustainable investments and the integration of Brazilian and Chinese financial markets. The agenda also includes efforts to mobilise capital for ecological transformation projects and to strengthen production chains.

Brazil has been trying to position its green transition as an investment opportunity, not only a climate policy goal. In practice, that means seeking financing for projects that can help decarbonise the economy while also expanding infrastructure, industry and innovation. China, with its large financial system and deep commercial relationship with Brazil, is central to that strategy.

According to the ministry, Brazil wants to mobilise the capital needed for decarbonisation, modernise its institutional relationship with China, attract productive investment, encourage innovation and reinforce the integration of value chains.

The new B3 and Wind arrangement does not itself guarantee capital inflows. But it gives Chinese financial institutions a more familiar route to study Brazilian assets, which can be an important first step before mandates, allocations and transactions follow.

What investors should watch next

The most immediate impact of the partnership will be informational. Chinese institutions will be able to track Brazilian securities and market indicators through a platform they already use. Over time, the broader question is whether that access translates into more Chinese capital entering Brazilian equities, fixed income or sector-specific investment vehicles.

For companies and investors watching Brazil, the development is another signal that Brasília is actively courting Asian capital for both conventional market financing and long-term transformation projects. The intersection of stock market access, sustainable investment and Brazil-China cooperation is likely to remain a key theme as the two countries build new financial links.

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Reported by the Brazil Business Club newsroom, with reference to Agência Brasil.