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  1. Exports

Brazil's iron ore to Argentina falls 67% as the real strengthens

Iron ore exports to Argentina fell 67× YTD through April 2026, closely tracking a ~4% BRL appreciation — the two series carry a 0.85 correlation.

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Editorial illustration on Brazilian foreign trade for the foreign trade chapter
Editorial illustration on Brazilian foreign trade for the foreign trade chapter

Summary

  • •Iron ore exports to Argentina fell 67× in the January–April 2026 YTD vs. the same period in 2025
  • •USD/BRL PTAX declined roughly 4% over the same window, with a 0.85 correlation to the ore flow
  • •Correlation ≠ causation: the most plausible mechanism is margin compression combined with weak Argentine demand
  • •The Brazil–Argentina iron ore corridor is historically sensitive to BRL/USD moves and Argentine mill output cycles
  • •If the real depreciates in H2 2026, the flow could reopen quickly — the signal works in both directions

Brazilian iron ore shipments to Argentina have nearly vanished from the YTD tally in 2026. Exports fell 67× compared to January–April 2025 — a collapse steep enough to rule out ordinary seasonality or routine demand softness. What stands out is what happened to the exchange rate in the same window: the USD/BRL PTAX declined close to 4%, and the two series carry a correlation coefficient of 0.85.

Correlation is not causation. But when two indicators move this closely in sync, the relationship is worth narrating carefully.

The external signal: FX and iron ore pricing

A falling USD/BRL means the Brazilian real appreciated modestly against the dollar in this period. For Brazilian exporters of dollar-denominated commodities, real appreciation compresses margins directly: the same international dollar price generates less domestic revenue per ton shipped. Iron ore's reference price is set globally — primarily through contracts benchmarked to the Platts IODEX 62% Fe index — so even small exchange-rate moves can shift short-run competitiveness between Brazilian, Australian, and South African suppliers.

This analysis is written by the Kyrodata Editorial Team from official data.

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Sources

  • ·MDIC ComexStat — capítulo 2601 (2026)
  • ·Kyrodata — dashboard interativo SH4 2601 (2026)

Topics

ExportsArgentinaMiningTrend

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The most plausible mechanism here is not that FX alone cut the flow to Argentina. It is more likely that Argentina — already operating under its own foreign-exchange constraints and with weak steel-sector demand — found it easier to reduce purchases when the price differential narrowed.

The Brazil–Argentina commodity corridor

Brazil's iron ore flow to Argentina is modest in absolute volume — Argentina's steel sector is a fraction of China's or Europe's. Within Mercosur, though, it is a meaningful corridor: Brazil supplies feedstock for Argentine mills, particularly when international prices make imports more competitive than sourcing domestic Argentine ore.

When this flow collapses, it signals that Argentine mills are reducing output, switching suppliers, or deferring purchases. The three hypotheses carry different implications for corridor operators. Determining which one is dominant requires looking at the Argentine side — local steel production data and import share by origin.

What to monitor

The 0.85 correlation between the export flow and the exchange rate implies high FX sensitivity for this corridor. If the real depreciates in the coming months — reversing this year's move — the flow could reopen with some speed. The logic is symmetric: what closed with a strong real can reopen with a weaker one.

Brazil is the world's #2 iron ore producer by volume; even minor corridor shifts are worth tracking in a macro portfolio context.

Source: MDIC ComexStat

What this means for you

For exporters: resist reading the decline as permanent market loss — this corridor is highly FX-sensitive; model recovery scenarios conditional on the USD/BRL level before permanently redirecting capacity to other destinations.

For importers: determine whether Argentine mills are substituting Brazilian ore with other origins (Chile, Australia) or simply deferring purchases — that distinction defines whether this is a temporary opening or a structural supplier shift.

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