Brazilian Central Bank

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The Brazilian Central Bank (in Portuguese: Banco Central do Brasil) is Brazil's highest monetary authority in and the country's governing body in finances and economics. It was established on December 31, 1964.

The Central Bank is linked of the Ministry of Finances. Like other central banks, the Brazilian central bank is the principal monetary authority of the country. It received this authority when it was founded by three different institutions: the Bureau of Currency and Credit (SUMOC), the Bank of Brasil (BB), and the National Treasury.

One of the arms of Brazil's monetary policy is the Banco Central do Brasil's SELIC rate.

On the weekend of August 6 and August 7, 2005 an unknown gang of burglars tunneled into the Central Bank's branch in Fortaleza and removed five containers of 50-real notes, with an estimated value of 156 million reais (US$68 million, £36 million, €55 million). The burglars managed to evade or disable the bank's internal alarms and sensors; the burglary remained undiscovered until the bank opened for business on the morning of Monday, August 8. See Banco Central burglary at Fortaleza

Central bank governors

pt:Banco Central do Brasil