# [WARNING] USTR plans 25% tariffs on Brazilian goods in trade escalation

*Tuesday, June 2, 2026 at 4:31 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-02T04:31:23.196Z (3h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, financial, trade, tariffs, Brazil, UnitedStates, metals, agriculture
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/9030.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: The U.S. Trade Representative has proposed a 25% tariff on all Brazilian goods, with exemptions under Section 232, alongside proposed tariff exemptions for beef, coffee, petroleum, and metal ores. This is a significant escalation with mixed commodity impacts, adding risk around Brazilian exports but signaling possible carve‑outs for key raw materials.

## Detail

1) What happened:
The U.S. Trade Representative has proposed imposing a 25% tariff on all Brazilian goods, framed as a major escalation in trade measures, while simultaneously proposing tariff exemptions for specific imported products including beef, coffee, petroleum, metal ores, and other goods. Details and scope of the exemptions, and how they interact with the blanket 25% proposal, are not yet fully clarified and will likely evolve through consultation and lobbying.

2) Supply/demand impact:
If implemented as stated but with broad exemptions for core commodities, the direct price impact on major raw materials may be muted, but the uncertainty itself is market‑moving:
- Agriculture: Brazil is a key U.S. supplier/competitor in beef, coffee, sugar, soybeans, and corn. Exemptions for beef and coffee suggest Washington is trying to avoid direct consumer price spikes, but non‑exempt ag products (e.g., some processed foods, value‑added soy products, ethanol) could face higher landed costs and demand destruction in the U.S. market.
- Energy: Exemptions for petroleum suggest that Brazilian crude flows to the U.S. Gulf should remain largely unimpeded, limiting immediate impacts on Brent/WTI spreads, though refiners may price in some legal and compliance risk.
- Metals: Exemptions for metal ores but not necessarily for semi‑finished/finished products could disadvantage Brazilian steel and aluminum exports, while leaving iron ore largely unaffected. This could tighten U.S. domestic supply of certain downstream metal products and support U.S. steel prices.

3) Affected assets and direction:
- Brazilian assets (BRL, Bovespa, exporters in steel, autos, manufactured goods) face downside risk and higher volatility.
- U.S. domestic steel and aluminum prices bias higher; U.S. steel equities likely benefit.
- Soft commodities and meats: near‑term volatility for coffee, beef, and possibly soy complex as traders parse which products are effectively exempt.
- FX: Bearish for BRL vs. USD; supportive for safe‑haven flows into USD if escalation broadens.

4) Historical precedent:
Similar broad‑brush tariffs (e.g., 2018 U.S.–China rounds) triggered multi‑percent moves in targeted export currencies, U.S. industrial equities, and affected commodity spreads, even before full implementation, as markets priced in uncertainty and supply‑chain re‑routing.

5) Duration of impact:
This is potentially structural if it progresses beyond proposal to codified policy, as firms reconfigure supply chains away from Brazil for non‑exempt goods. Near‑term, the main effect is a geopolitical and trade risk premium that could drive >1% moves in BRL, Brazilian equities, and selected U.S. industrial/metal prices over days to weeks as details emerge.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** BRL/USD, Bovespa equity index, U.S. steel equities, U.S. HRC steel futures, Coffee futures, Live cattle futures
