Through April 2026, Brazil's imports of floating platforms fell 12.4% by weight while FOB value jumped 25× — a 2,552-pp divergence that signals a deep mix.
The tonnage went down. The bill went up — by a lot. In the first four months of 2026, Brazil imported 282,483 tons of specialized vessels and floating platforms, down 12.4% year-on-year. The FOB value, however, tells the opposite story: US$ 5.15 billion, versus US$ 195 million in the same window a year earlier. That is a 25× increase in value with no corresponding rise in physical weight.
The gap between the two metrics hits 2,552 percentage points — one of the most extreme readings in MDIC ComexStat's record for this equipment category. The implied unit price moved from US$ 0.605/kg to US$ 18.25/kg. To put that in context: one ton of this equipment that arrived at Brazilian ports costing roughly US$ 600 in 2025 cost close to US$ 18,000 in 2026. No input-cost inflation explains that.
Three hypotheses are worth considering. None is conclusive with the available data.
First, product mix shift within the category. Dredgers and floating cranes are heavy per unit but cheap per kilogram. Semi-submersible drilling rigs or FPSOs — floating production, storage and offloading units — weigh far less per asset but each can carry a price tag of US$ 1–2 billion. A single FPSO hull arrival can add US$ 2 billion to the FOB tally while barely moving aggregate tonnage.
Second, delivery of long-cycle contracts. Petrobras runs a multi-year procurement cycle for pre-salt deepwater assets. When one or two hulls arrive in the same quarter, reported FOB value spikes even as total weight stays flat or falls, because smaller auxiliary equipment drops out of the period's import mix.
Third, customs reclassification. Equipment previously logged under industrial machinery headings may have been correctly recoded as floating platforms, inflating value in this category without any real change in the physical trade flow.
This divergence has limited use for short-cycle commodity traders — floating platforms are not shelf goods. The signal matters more for offshore oil-and-gas infrastructure analysts, hull underwriters, and heavy-lift freight operators pricing South Atlantic routes.
For project-finance desks, the number carries weight: US$ 5 billion in platform imports in a single quarter affects Brazil's capital account and the debt-service profile of offshore projects. The Receita Federal and MDIC have separate interest in checking whether the unit-price jump reflects real assets or intragroup transfer pricing between multinational subsidiaries.
The timing aligns with Petrobras's expanded contracting with Asian shipyards in the Santos Basin pre-salt layer between 2023 and 2025, lending support to the FPSO hypothesis — though it stops short of confirming it.
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