Today’s Brazil finance news was dominated by balance-sheet moves and year-end capital actions. Two companies moved to raise capital (Banco Mercantil and Ampla).
Several names posted fresh payout calendars (Grendene, Mills, Romi). In restructuring, Oi reported a court move tied to its Serede unit.
Outside equities, a logistics fund cut vacancy sharply with a new Nubank lease. Education and banking also brought funding and capital-structure updates (Yduqs and Paraná Banco), while Enjoei proposed returning excess capital to shareholders.
Zero-overlap confirmation: none of the 10 items below have appeared in any previous report in this chat, and the selection was checked to avoid reuse.
Verification: every item below is based on published, verifiable reporting dated December 26, 2025; nothing was invented.
1. Banco Mercantil proposes capital increase of up to R$500m ($93m) and announces R$180m ($33m) in interim dividends
The plan sets a capital raise of at least R$300m ($56m) and up to R$500m ($93m), tied to new shares with nominal value R$7.70, and follows a tax settlement that the report said regularizes roughly R$2.5b ($463m) in debt. The same coverage cited dividends of R$1.660 per ON and R$1.826 per PN.
Why this matters: It is a “clean-up plus growth capital” signal that changes the bank’s capital cushion, payout optics, and medium-term expansion capacity.
2. Ampla Energia approves a R$1.6b ($296m) capital increase; separate report cites a R$1.8b ($333m) notes offering
The company approved a R$1.6b ($296m) increase via capitalization of credits tied to shareholder loans held by Enel Brasil, issuing about 73.2m new shares at R$21.86 each. A separate report said Ampla also announced an offer of notes totaling R$1.8b ($333m).
Why this matters: It is a large recap that reshapes leverage and refinancing options, and it matters for Enel-linked structure and creditor confidence.
Brazil Investor Press Brief: 10 Market-Moving Reads From December 26, 2025. (Photo Internet reproduction)
3. Grendene approves R$979.9m ($181m) in extraordinary dividends, split across four 2026 payment dates
The package totals about R$1.08 per share, with payments scheduled for January 14, March 18, June 10, and September 9, 2026. The record date is December 26, with shares trading ex-dividend from December 29.
Why this matters: It is a large, dated payout schedule that can drive positioning well beyond a single ex-date and influence dividend screens into 2026.
4. Mills approves R$150m ($28m) in extraordinary dividends with an April 2026 record date
The payout is expected at roughly R$0.661 per share net (as estimated in the report), with record date April 20, 2026 and payment on April 30, 2026.
Why this matters: It adds a clear 2026 cash-return milestone, which matters for dividend mandates and reinvestment timing.
5. Romi approves R$16.77m ($3m) in JCP; record date December 29, ex-JCP from December 30
The JCP is R$0.18 per share gross (R$0.153 net), with payment expected by December 31, 2026.
Why this matters: It is a dated yield event that can affect liquidity and “carry” trades around the record/ex window, even with a long payment horizon.
6. Enjoei proposes capital reduction steps and a R$40m ($7m) restitution, pending shareholder approval
The board approved proposals that still require an assembly vote, including absorbing accumulated losses and returning R$40m ($7m) to shareholders as excess capital.
The company also cited cash added from a prior partial sale of a subsidiary and noted a legal window before any restitution becomes effective.
Why this matters: Returning capital often signals a reset in growth plans and a tighter focus on runway, burn, and balance-sheet discipline.
7. Logistics fund BRCO11 signs five-year lease with Nubank and cuts vacancy from 11.3% to 0.8%
The leased area is about 9,150 m², and the report said the rent should add around R$0.014 (about $0.003) per quota per month to results.
Why this matters: Vacancy compression is the fastest route to steadier cash flow in logistics funds, which can tighten cap-rate expectations and support distributions.
8. Yduqs completes a R$500m ($93m) debenture issuance at CDI + 0.70%
The issuance has a four-year maturity, with proceeds directed to cash reinforcement and general corporate purposes.
Why this matters: It gives a clean read on funding access and marginal pricing for a large education group, shaping refinancing risk and leverage optionality.
9. Paraná Banco capitalizes reserves in a R$216.9m ($40m) capital increase, without issuing new shares
The capital rises from R$783.1m ($145m) to R$1.0b ($185m) through reserve capitalization.
Why this matters: It is a regulatory-capital and balance-sheet optics move that can affect payout headroom and credit growth capacity.
10. Oi: court anticipates effects of Serede bankruptcy, triggering urgent measures
Oi reported that a Rio business court granted urgent relief anticipating parts of Serede’s bankruptcy effects, including a 60-day suspension of certain obligations, automatic termination of active contracts, immediate asset gathering, and authorization to terminate labor contracts in coordination with unions.
Why this matters: It is a concrete step in unwinding a distressed unit, with direct implications for recoveries, operating continuity, and the restructuring perimeter.