Brazil's strength

donbass

New Member
Jan 8, 2026
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Would it be a good idea to deposit like 15 billion usd worth of bitcoin into Brazil's financial system as either a long term investment or otherwise? Is Brazil strong enough to safeguard such amount of btc? In, what ways possible could Brazil protect such investments? Investing like in hotels, construction, businesses, ect...?
 
If you got billions to spare, you obviously have to send those to Zelenskyy.

Brazil has to stand on their own two feet, just like Maduro did.
 
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I assume that your Brazil idea is based on the de-globalization investment thesis...?

In which case, Brazil sucks the most from all LATAM countries if you are investing your crypto proceeds. Harder to buy property/ businesses directly with crypto because of the tight AML regulations enforced by the Central Bank.

Based on your past posts, and on the mere fact that you are asking these types of questions on a forum instead of consulting at least an asset manager, it seems that you are hastily preparing for a “job” for which you are woefully unprepared.
As they say in Colombia "el vivo vive del bobo… y el bobo de mamá". The smart live off the stupid, and the stupid live off their mothers.

So step 1) don't be stupid and get yourself a plug in any country that you'll be investing in. And step 2) invest in a financial advisor.

Some suggestions based on your Brazil idea:
You are best off buying in countries that are just as rich in energy and commodities as Brazil, yet still carry the stigma of inflation, guerrilla wars, and bankruptcies.​
Simply put, inflationary economies mean that locals are far more versed in crypto, and they use it left and right to keep their purchasing power (Argentina and Colombia comes to mind).​
And countries that have been decimated by the IMF's "hitmen" (read John Perkins)... they will be underpriced relative to Brazil, which has been relatively stable.​
But U.S. boots on the ground are bringing in Western capital to loot all of their resources.​
I’m talking about the newest U.S. colony acquisitions, such as Argentina or even Venezuela.​
Yes, the chamos are an interesting play if you truly have 9–10 figures at your disposal. In that case, you treat Venezuelan investments like a crypto shitcoin: throwing $20,000 at some hilltop mansion that may or may not be confiscated, but could just as easily go 10x, is not a bad bet. It is a time-consuming endeavor, though, but there are plenty of interesadas to keep you company.​
Chile is interesting as well (50% of its stock market is directly or indirectly linked to copper).​
Argentina is commodity rich, and you better bet the U.S. is going to use their lapdog Milei to pump in mining investments to extract every ounce of lithium and precious metals there.​
With the aforementioned examples, you are benefiting from the Western rotation of capital out of the financialized economy and into assets synthetically tied to energy and commodities... just at a lower price.
And we are still working on the de-globalization invesment thesis, where you're looking for countries that have a strong energy sector, which can offset the rising oil prices due to the Middle East war.


Energy prices soar => LATAM country has a large energy sector => offsets higher oil prices => local businesses can produce goods/services cost-efficiently => your LATAM investment becomes valuable long-term

Finally, I will mention that the country doesn't matter as much as understading deep value investing (finding businesses with low P/Es, high dividend payouts and low debt).

Now since this is the internet, there's a 85% chance that you are a troll. Either way, I hope this steered the thread into a productive conversation.
 

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