By Brazil Stock Guide – XP is discussing with Banco do Brasil a potential entry into the consortium of large financial institutions that will take part in the rescue operation for BRB, Folha de S.Paulo reported. The talks come after losses at the Federal District-controlled bank tied to the purchase of credit portfolios and other unbacked assets from Banco Master.
According to the newspaper, the move came from XP itself, which contacted Banco do Brasil to seek information about the operation. Banco do Brasil is coordinating the rescue talks, which involve the FGC, Brazil’s deposit insurance fund, large banks and guarantees linked to Federal District revenues.
The case is sensitive because XP is at the center of the debate over Master’s expansion in Brazil’s retail market. According to Folha, the platform had distributed about R$30 billion in securities from the Master conglomerate to investors. BTG Pactual had distributed another R$6.6 billion.
Together, XP and BTG accounted for more than 70% of the FGC-backed funding issued by Daniel Vorcaro’s bank. The scale of those figures helps explain why some large banks have been pressing behind the scenes for XP to also take part in the rescue effort.
The Master Bill
Master’s crisis has become a test for the distribution model of CDBs through independent investment platforms. For years, smaller banks used higher yields and FGC protection as a commercial argument to raise money from retail investors. The problem is that the guarantee of up to R$250,000 per taxpayer ID reduced investors’ perception of risk, while commissions paid to advisers increased the incentive to sell.
That arrangement helped turbocharge Master’s funding, turning what had been a small financial institution into a relevant presence in retail investor portfolios. When the crisis erupted, the bill stopped being only the issuer’s problem. It reached the FGC, the banks that fund the guarantee system and, indirectly, the broader cost of funding in the market.
XP and Banco do Brasil declined to comment to Folha. Itaú Unibanco and Bradesco said they would not comment; BTG Pactual, Santander and Caixa did not respond to the newspaper’s request.
Pressure on Platforms
The episode increases regulatory pressure on investment platforms. Large retail banks have argued that Brazil’s central bank should require greater transparency over potential conflicts of interest in the sale of bank securities, especially when distributors and advisers receive significant compensation.
A Guaranteed Rescue
The structure under negotiation provides for the FGC to grant the full amount of the loan to the Federal District government. A pool of banks from the so-called S1 group — Brazil’s largest financial institutions — would provide a bank guarantee for the FGC loan. The final collateral would consist of Federal District revenues from Brazil’s state and municipal participation funds.






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