
Pix, Brazil’s instant payment system operated by the central bank, can process up to 280 million transactions in a single day. Yet it has returned to the spotlight for the wrong reasons. In recent months, hackers have targeted providers such as C&M Software and Sinqia/Evertec. The attacks erode the platform’s aura of inviolability.
Pix was conceived as a showcase of regulatory innovation and Brazilian soft power. While FedNow in the US and TIPS in Europe still stumble, the made in Brazil model became a global reference. But the latest breaches have chipped away at that prestige. Critics exploit the weakness to argue for private alternatives. For Visa, Mastercard, PayPal, Apple Pay and WhatsApp Pay, each attack is a gift.
The risk is that distrust spreads faster than technical fixes. The core of Pix remains solid, but its weaker links — midsize banks and fintechs that connect to the system — have become exploitable gaps. In payments, trust matters as much as encryption.
Pix is not Brazil’s bulwark against global finance; it is a fortress still under construction. Unless its gates are sealed, this national pride risks turning into a ruin on display.






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