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The mornings still bite, mind you. It was a cold 16°C overnight, so the city stepped out in coats it will happily be carrying by lunchtime.
The market feels the chill first. The dollar climbed to a three-month high near R$5.21 after a fresh US sanctions action, with the Ibovespa easing to 171,689.
And the countdown is on. Brazil face Norway and Erling Haaland in the round of 16 on Sunday, at MetLife Stadium just outside New York.
01
Weather & What to Wear
FOUR-DAY OUTLOOK
Today is the mildest and clearest of the week, with a high near 26°C and dry skies through the afternoon. In the sun it feels genuinely pleasant, the last of a welcome warm stretch after the cold of recent days.
Do not be fooled by the daytime warmth, though. Mornings and evenings stay cold, dipping toward 16°C, so a jacket you can shed by midday and pull back on after dark is the right call.
Make the most of it, because a cold front is coming. Friday cools gently to 24°C, and by Saturday the high tumbles to around 17°C, a sharp drop that will feel like a return to the depths of winter for the weekend.
02
Day at a Glance
SNAPSHOT
— Weather: 26°C by day, but cold at 16°C morning and night
— Football: Brazil face Norway on Sunday in the round of 16
— Venue: MetLife Stadium, New York, a 5 pm BRT kickoff
— Markets: dollar at a three-month high near R$5.21; Ibovespa 171,689
— Ahead: the US jobs report lands today, the week’s big number
— Weekend: a cold front drops Saturday’s high to around 17°C
A last mild day before the weekend chill.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Brazil — Live Market Board
B3 · São Paulo
Jul 2, 2026 · 07:01
Ibovespa · benchmark
171,689
-0.19%
+23.03% over 12 months
Market breadth · 15 names
47% advancing
7 ▲ advancing8 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
Sector heatmap · average move today
Energy
+0.28%
PETR4, PRIO3
Mining
0.00%
VALE3, CSNA3, GGBR4
Financials
-0.24%
ITUB4, BBDC4, BBAS3, B3SA3
Consumer Staples
-0.55%
ABEV3
Industrials
-1.25%
WEGE3, RENT3
Consumer Disc.
-4.64%
AZZA3
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
171,689
-0.19%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
67,248
+0.42%
S&P IPSAChile
10,812
-0.25%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,121,855
-1.48%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,259.83
-0.41%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
55,499.93
+0.00%
Full instrument board
| IBOV | 171,689 | -0.19% | +23.03% | 172,024 | — | — | — |
| USD/BRL | 5.21 | +0.01% | -4.60% | 5.21 | 5.22 | 5.21 | — |
| SELIC | 14.25% | — | — | — | — | — | |
| PETR4 | 37.83 | +0.08% | +20.13% | 37.80 | 37.84 | 37.40 | 21,054,900 |
| VALE3 | 77.97 | +0.12% | +46.12% | 77.88 | 78.92 | 77.04 | 15,327,100 |
| ITUB4 | 42.44 | +0.62% | +17.83% | 42.18 | 42.80 | 41.47 | 26,391,100 |
| BBDC4 | 18.12 | +0.22% | +8.63% | 18.08 | 18.22 | 17.84 | 56,449,900 |
| BBAS3 | 19.73 | -0.90% | -9.95% | 19.91 | 19.99 | 19.56 | 16,743,400 |
| B3SA3 | 14.40 | -0.89% | -0.69% | 14.53 | 14.59 | 14.20 | 38,014,900 |
| ABEV3 | 16.20 | -0.55% | +21.08% | 16.29 | 16.39 | 16.09 | 17,748,400 |
| WEGE3 | 46.26 | -1.39% | +8.85% | 46.91 | 47.13 | 46.10 | 4,536,000 |
| PRIO3 | 52.40 | +0.48% | +25.36% | 52.15 | 52.53 | 51.36 | 5,680,200 |
| SUZB3 | 40.59 | +2.11% | -20.16% | 39.75 | 40.75 | 39.43 | 6,289,800 |
| RENT3 | 41.08 | -1.11% | +1.11% | 41.54 | 41.65 | 40.27 | 4,330,200 |
| AZZA3 | 17.05 | -4.64% | -58.52% | 17.88 | 18.12 | 17.02 | 3,088,000 |
| CSNA3 | 4.59 | -0.65% | -38.88% | 4.62 | 4.70 | 4.49 | 10,253,000 |
| GGBR4 | 20.89 | +0.53% | +30.56% | 20.78 | 21.04 | 20.49 | 6,434,500 |
| ENEV3 | 26.25 | -1.76% | +91.61% | 26.72 | 26.58 | 26.03 | 6,042,700 |
Largest moves today
AZZA3
17.05
-4.64%
SUZB3
40.59
+2.11%
ENEV3
26.25
-1.76%
WEGE3
46.26
-1.39%
RENT3
41.08
-1.11%
BBAS3
19.73
-0.90%
B3SA3
14.40
-0.89%
CSNA3
4.59
-0.65%
The session read
The Ibovespa eased 0.19%, with breadth negative — 7 of 15 names higher. Materials led, while Consumer Disc. lagged.
From The Rio Times
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03
What to See & Do
THURSDAY IN SÃO PAULO
TODAY’S PICK — THE LAST MILD AFTERNOON
Vila Madalena, on foot and unhurried
With the last mild, dry day of the week in hand, the move is to explore on foot, and few places reward a wander like Vila Madalena. The hilly, bohemian neighbourhood is the creative heart of São Paulo, its streets full of galleries, studios, bars and some of the best coffee in the country.
Start at the Beco do Batman, the famous alley whose walls are a constantly shifting open-air gallery of street art. It is one of the great free spectacles of the city, and the surrounding lanes reward the curious with more murals at every turn.
From there, drift downhill through the independent shops and design stores, pausing for a flat white at Coffee Lab or a pastry at one of the neighbourhood bakeries. The pace here is slower than the rest of São Paulo, and the mild afternoon is perfect for it.
As the light softens, the bars begin to fill, and Vila Madalena shifts effortlessly from daytime browsing into one of the city’s liveliest evenings. It is a neighbourhood that rewards lingering, so there is no need to rush the transition from one to the other.
It is the simplest and most rewarding of outings, and exactly the sort of thing a fine day is for. Make a long, slow, unhurried afternoon of it, because the cold front lands tomorrow and the weekend turns sharply colder across the city.
OUTDOORS — PARKS & OPEN STREETS
Green space in the last of the sun
A mild, dry day is the one to spend out among São Paulo’s parks, so make time before the cold returns. Parque Ibirapuera, the city’s great green lung, is at its very finest under winter sun, with its lake circuit, jogging paths and the sculptural white curves of Oscar Niemeyer’s buildings.
For something quieter, the Parque do Povo in the Itaim area is a more local space, popular with joggers and dog-walkers alike and well-suited to a gentle hour away from the crowds. Further west, the Parque Villa-Lobos offers wide open lawns and cycle paths with genuine room to breathe, a favourite for families and weekend athletes.
For something distinctly Paulistano, the Minhocão — the elevated road that cuts through the centre — is closed to cars each evening and handed over to walkers and cyclists. Strolling its length at dusk, with the city rising on either side, is a genuinely unusual and quietly memorable urban pleasure, well worth timing your day around.
COFFEE & WHERE TO WORK — VILA MADALENA & FARIA LIMA
Brazil’s capital of coffee and cowork
São Paulo is, without much argument, Brazil’s capital of specialty coffee and remote work, and a mild Thursday is a fine day to enjoy both. In Vila Madalena, Coffee Lab on Rua Fradique Coutinho roasts in-house and remains a pilgrimage site for serious coffee drinkers.
For something more polished, Octavio Café near Faria Lima pairs excellent espresso with a calm, professional room built for laptops. Santo Grão and Suplicy Cafés Especiais round out a list that would be the envy of any city in the region.
When you need a proper desk, the options run deep. WeWork holds several Faria Lima towers, Spaces has bright floors in Vila Madalena and Pinheiros, and Cubo Itaú in Vila Olímpia is the city’s best-known startup hub. Day passes run roughly R$50 to R$100, with fast connections throughout.
THE CONTRASTING PLAY — THE PINACOTECA & LUZ
Grand galleries in the old city
If the parks are not for you, the Pinacoteca do Estado in the Luz district is one of the most beautiful museum buildings in the country. Its collection of Brazilian art, housed in a grand restored hall with skylit galleries, rewards a slow and thoughtful visit.
The surrounding Luz neighbourhood carries real history, from the great rail station to the Jardim da Luz beside it, the city’s oldest public garden. It is a quieter, more contemplative São Paulo than the avenues to the south, and the two linked Pinacoteca buildings now anchor a genuine cultural quarter.
Pair the main collection with the Pina Luz annexe if you have the time, and give yourself an unhurried couple of hours among the galleries. Check the museum’s website for the day’s opening hours before you go, as they can shift around holidays and special exhibitions.
TONIGHT, AFTER 7 PM
A cold night, a warm room
As the temperature drops after dark, São Paulo’s nightlife moves indoors and turns up the warmth. Vila Madalena is the classic first stop, its sloping streets packed with bars, botecos and live-music rooms that fill quickly even on a midweek evening.
For something more refined, the bars of Itaim Bibi and Pinheiros serve some of the best cocktails in Latin America, and the city’s dining scene is genuinely world-class. Book ahead if there is somewhere you have meant to try, as the good tables go fast even midweek.
Those after culture will find the theatres and concert halls in full swing, with the Sala São Paulo among the finest classical venues anywhere. Wrap up warm for the walk between spots, as the night air has real bite at this time of year.
One of the city’s quiet joys is how late it stays alive. Even on an ordinary Thursday, the better neighbourhoods hum well past midnight, and there is always one more warm, welcoming room to be found if the night runs long and the company is right.
ALSO ON TODAY
Beco do Batman — Vila Madalena’s open-air street-art alley.
Parque Ibirapuera — the lake circuit and MAC USP, fine in the winter sun.
Pinacoteca — Luz district, Brazilian art in a grand skylit hall.
Minhocão — closed to cars at dusk, given over to walkers and cyclists.
SESC Pompeia — open daily, a rotating contemporary programme.
Sunday: Brazil vs Norway, MetLife Stadium, in the round of 16.
04
Getting Around
TRANSPORT
The Metrô is by far the fastest way around the city, running normally across all lines today. For Vila Madalena, the line 2 (green) station of the same name drops you in the heart of the neighbourhood.
Ride apps are steady, with surcharges expected around the evening rush. On a fine day, the Bike Sampa stations near the parks and along Avenida Paulista are well-stocked for a ride between sights.
05
Where to Eat
LUNCH & DINNER
Lunch: Vila Madalena is full of easy lunch spots, from contemporary bistros to a hearty prato feito at a corner botequim. For something classic, a traditional cantina in Bixiga delivers hearty Italian-Paulistano cooking.
Dinner: The acclaimed kitchens of Jardins are the place for contemporary Brazilian fare, while Vila Madalena itself offers everything from wood-fired pizza to a warming feijoada as the evening cools.
06
Practical Info
GOOD TO KNOW
The day swings from cold mornings to mild afternoons, so dress for both in one outfit: something warm you can shed by midday and pull back on after dark. Cards and Pix work almost everywhere, though markets still like cash.
Keep a warmer layer ready for the weekend, when the cold front lands and Saturday’s high drops to around 17°C. For digital nomads, São Paulo is Brazil’s best-equipped city for remote work, with coworking day passes running roughly R$50 to R$100.
07
Community & Lifestyle
FOR NEWCOMERS
São Paulo’s international community is large and well-organised, with active groups for newcomers, professionals and language learners. Most coordinate through Meetup, WhatsApp and InterNations, and the calendar rarely has a quiet week.
This week, expat groups are planning where to gather for Sunday’s Brazil match, with bars across Vila Madalena, Pinheiros and Itaim set to screen it. It is a friendly, easy way to feel the city’s football passion alongside other newcomers.
08
Game Day
THE ROAD AHEAD
The wait is nearly over. Brazil face Norway in the round of 16 on Sunday at MetLife Stadium just outside New York, with a 5 pm BRT kickoff, now just three days away.
Norway are no gentle draw. They reached this stage by edging Ivory Coast 2–1, and in Erling Haaland they carry one of the most feared strikers in the world, the fastest man ever to reach sixty international goals.
The tie sets up a duel worth the ticket alone: Haaland’s raw power against the dazzling movement of Vinícius Júnior, who has been among Brazil’s brightest lights so far. Carlo Ancelotti will be plotting how to blunt the Norwegian threat while unleashing his own.
Brazil have the weekend to prepare, and the whole country will be watching. Expect bars and homes across São Paulo to fill on Sunday evening as the Seleção begin the serious business of the knockouts.
09
Business & Markets
WEEK IN FIGURES
The dollar pushed to a three-month high against the real on Wednesday, trading near R$5.21, after a fresh US Treasury sanctions action unsettled the currency. São Paulo’s Ibovespa slipped 0.20% to 171,689, drifting rather than diving.
The Treasury’s action targeted a money-laundering network tied to a Brazilian criminal organisation, and traders priced in the compliance risk it attaches to deals with any hidden criminal link. It landed inside an already tense moment in relations between Washington and Brasília.
The bigger number arrives today: the US jobs report, brought forward before the July 4 holiday, which will steer the dollar and the central bank‘s rate path. The Selic sits at 14.25%, and the real is still up around 5.6% against the dollar this year despite the recent wobble.
10
Plan Ahead
THE WEEK
THE DAYS AHEAD
Fri July 3 — cooling gently to 24°C as the warm spell fades.
Sat July 4 — the cold front lands; the high tumbles to around 17°C.
Sun July 5 — Brazil vs Norway, MetLife Stadium, in the round of 16.
Late July — the central bank’s next rate decision, on July 28 and 29.
Markets: today’s US jobs report is the week’s number to watch.
11
FAQ
QUICK ANSWERS
Who do Brazil play next, and when?
Brazil face Norway in the round of 16 on Sunday, July 5, at MetLife Stadium just outside New York, with a 5 pm BRT kickoff. It is a single knockout game, with extra time and penalties if the sides cannot be separated.
Norway reached this stage by beating Ivory Coast 2–1, with a late goal from their star striker Erling Haaland. The tie sets up an eye-catching duel between Haaland and Brazil’s own Vinícius Júnior.
Check local listings for the confirmed broadcast on Globo and SporTV.
How mild is São Paulo today?
São Paulo is mild and dry by day but still cold at the edges. The afternoon high reaches around 26°C, the last of a pleasant warm stretch, with clear skies and no rain to speak of through the middle of the day.
Mornings and evenings, however, dip toward 16°C, so it is coat weather first thing and again after dark. The best approach is layering: something warm you can shed by midday and pull back on as the temperature drops.
Enjoy it now, because a cold front drops Saturday’s high sharply to around 17°C.
Why has the dollar risen against the real?
The dollar climbed to a three-month high near R$5.21 on Wednesday, after a fresh US Treasury sanctions action unsettled the Brazilian currency. The measure targeted a money-laundering network linked to a Brazilian criminal group.
Traders reacted to the compliance risk such actions attach to business dealings, and the move landed amid an already tense moment in US–Brazil relations. The Ibovespa slipped only slightly, easing 0.20% to 171,689.
Attention now turns to today’s US jobs report, the week’s biggest number, which will shape how the real trades from here.
Where can I work remotely in São Paulo today?
São Paulo is Brazil’s best-equipped city for remote work, with a deep bench of cafés and coworking spaces. In Vila Madalena, Coffee Lab roasts in-house and welcomes long sittings, while Octavio Café near Faria Lima offers a calm, professional room.
For a proper desk, WeWork runs several Faria Lima towers, Spaces has floors in Vila Madalena and Pinheiros, and Cubo Itaú in Vila Olímpia is the city’s flagship startup hub.
Day passes run R$50 to R$100, with fast connections and meeting rooms across most spaces.
Related: Rio de Janeiro Daily Brief for Thursday · São Paulo Daily Brief for Wednesday


13 hours ago
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