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Brazil’s Small Businesses Get a Direct Line to Southeast Asia Via Shopee

Shopee, Southeast Asia’s main e-commerce platform, has made a deal with Brazil’s national export agency ApexBrasil and the postal service Correios.

For the first time, small and medium Brazilian businesses will receive direct, official support to sell their products online in Southeast Asian markets.

Singapore will be the first target in this new initiative. This move comes from official statements by Shopee, ApexBrasil, and Correios, and is backed by verified figures.

Brazilian firms joining this pilot project will get training to understand Asian online buyers, help with handling sales on Shopee’s platform, and use Exporta Fácil—a program from Correios that simplifies international shipping for small exporters.

The deal removes technical and logistical obstacles that used to push smaller businesses out of the export game. Brazil’s e-commerce sector is booming, recording $62.6 billion in sales in 2024 and expecting solid growth through 2028.

Brazil’s Small Businesses Get a Direct Line to Southeast Asia Via ShopeeBrazil’s Small Businesses Get a Direct Line to Southeast Asia Via Shopee. (Photo Internet reproduction)

More than 80% of Brazilians now access the internet, and digital payments are rising. Globally, online sales hit at least $6 trillion in 2024 and should reach $8 trillion by 2027, according to official trade monitors and industry organizations.

Brazil’s trade with Southeast Asia is also expanding fast—official government data shows a 21% jump in trade, reaching $16.6 billion in just the first half of 2022.

Shopee Empowers Brazil’s Small Businesses to Go Global

Shopee, now established in Brazil since 2019, connects millions of local vendors to new buyers, and more than 90% of what it sells in Brazil comes from these local brands.

The real story here is how Brazil’s small producers, who long faced barriers getting their goods overseas, can now join global markets without giant resources.

Instead of relying only on giant trading partners, they can sell directly to booming Asian economies where online shopping is growing much faster than the world average. This pushes Brazilian business to diversify and grow stronger.

For other countries, it’s a lesson in using digital technology, strategic partnerships, and export support to get everyday companies into the globalization game.

Brazilian authorities and Shopee will use data from this pilot to break down remaining obstacles, so more small businesses can expand abroad.

This agreement, confirmed by Brazil’s official trade and postal agencies and Shopee, is a hard fact and a sign: the digital economy is making once-distant markets reachable for small exporters everywhere, if they have the right help.



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