Petrobras Tops $101 Billion, Displacing MercadoLibre as Latin America's Top Stock
A crude oil rally driven by Strait of Hormuz tensions and a capital rotation toward commodities lifted the Brazilian oil company to the top spot on Wall Street.

Petrobras closed the last week of June 2026 with a market capitalization above $101 billion, displacing MercadoLibre as the most valuable Latin American company listed on Wall Street. The figure confirms a broader global capital rotation out of high-growth technology names and into energy, banking, and commodities.
The Brazilian oil company entered 2026 valued at roughly $75 billion, according to Bloomberg Línea data. A crude oil rally, driven by tensions in the Strait of Hormuz following the U.S.-Iran conflict, elevated the geopolitical risk premium and directly benefited regional hydrocarbon producers. MercadoLibre, which had led the ranking since late 2025 with a market cap of approximately $102 billion, fell to fourth place. The Argentine e-commerce platform was also overtaken by Itaú Unibanco, which climbed to roughly $91 billion, and by América Móvil. Over the same period, tech stocks extended their losses in global markets, according to AP.
"Flows moved out of high-growth companies like MercadoLibre and Nu Holdings and into more traditional sectors," Felipe Sepúlveda, an analyst at Admirals Latinoamérica, told Bloomberg Línea. "The war raised the geopolitical risk premium, particularly on fears of supply disruptions and blockages through the Strait of Hormuz," he added. Emanoelle Santos of XTB Latam agreed: "The market has gone back to demanding visible profitability over promises of future growth."
The rotation hit other regional tech names as well. Nu Holdings fell from over $81 billion to roughly $61 billion over the same period. JPMorgan maintains an overweight recommendation on Petrobras, backed by the company's expanding pre-salt production and a disciplined dividend policy, according to Bloomberg Línea.
This shift consolidates a broader turn in global investor preferences. With the geopolitical risk premium elevated by the Middle East conflict and pressure mounting on tech valuations, Latin American oil producers capable of generating cash and paying dividends are commanding the market's attention. Petrobras's next quarterly report will offer a clearer read on where the cycle stands.
This article was produced with artificial intelligence assistance from verified sources and reviewed by a human editor before publication.
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This article was drafted with AI assistance from verified sources and reviewed by a human editor before publication.
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