Company: BBD
Filing Date: 2025-05-30
Form Type: 6-K
Source: 0001292814-25-002283
Chunk: 41

Company: BANK BRADESCO
Filing Date: 2025-05-30
Form: 6-K
Chunk 41
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 more than 10% of the total net revenue

Bradesco
has no clients that are responsible for more than 10% of the total net revenue of the institution.

1.6
– Relevant effects of the state regulation of activities

| a) | need for governmental authorization for the exercise of activities and history of relation with the 
 public administration in order to obtain such authorizations                                        |

The
basic institutional framework of the Brazilian Financial System was established in 1964 by Law No. 4,595/64, known as the “Banking
Reform Law”. The Banking Reform Law dealt with monetary, banking and credit policies and institutions, and created the CMN.

Principal regulatory agencies

CMN

CMN
is responsible for overall supervision of monetary, credit, budgetary, fiscal and public debt policies. CMN has the following functions:

| · | regulating loans and advances granted by Brazilian financial institutions; |

| · | regulating Brazilian currency issue; |

| · | supervising Brazil’s reserves of gold and foreign exchange; |

| · | determining saving, foreign exchange and investment policies in Brazil; and |

| · | regulating capital markets in Brazil. |

Within
its functions, the CMN provides, through Resolution No. 3,427/06, as amended, the adoption by the CVM of the risk-based supervision model
as general guidance for its activities, on which the Risk Based Supervision System (SBR) was created. The SBR is also regulated by CVM
Resolution No. 53/21, which sets its objectives.

Central Bank of Brazil

The
Central Bank of Brazil was created by Law No. 4,595/64 and is the primary executor of the guidelines of the CMN, responsible for ensuring
the purchasing power of the national currency, including responsibility for:

| · | implementing currency and credit policies established by the CMN; |

| · | regulating and supervising public and private sector Brazilian financial institutions; |

| · | controlling and monitoring the flow of foreign currency to and from Brazil; and |

| · | overseeing the Brazilian financial markets. |

The
Central Bank of Brazil supervises financial institutions by:

| · | setting minimum capital requirements, compulsory deposit requirements and operational limits; |

| · | authorizing corporate documents, capital increases, acquisition of interest in new companies and the establishment 
 or transfer of principal places of business or branches (in Brazil or abroad);                                     |

| · | authorizing changes in shareholder control of financial institutions;