Showing posts with label Copom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Copom. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 December 2025

Brazil’s Inflation Hits Six-Year Low as Public Perception Remains Deeply Split, New Data Shows

Brazil posted its lowest November inflation rate since 2018, signaling positive momentum for the economy, but new survey data reveals a country sharply divided between optimism and financial stress.

Brazil’s official inflation index (IPCA) rose 0.18% in November, slightly below market expectations and marking the lowest figure for the month in six years. Year-to-date inflation reached 3.92%, while the 12-month rate stood at 4.46%, safely under the central bank’s 4.50% upper target. Economists view the result as one of the most encouraging signs for price stability in 2024.

The main drivers of inflation remain non-tradable services, such as education, health care, haircuts, and parking, sectors heated by a historically tight labor market. Brazil’s unemployment rate is now 5.4%, its lowest level in years. Meanwhile, inflation for tradable goods continues to ease, supported by a stronger Brazilian real earlier in the year and six consecutive months of falling in-home food prices.

Still, political volatility has weighed on financial assets. Discussions around a potential presidential bid by Flávio Bolsonaro triggered a sharp reaction in markets: the exchange rate jumped from R$5.30 to R$5.50, and long-term interest rates spiked. A weaker currency increases the cost of imported goods, potentially pressuring inflation in 2025.

Upcoming decisions from the Brazilian central bank’s COPOM and the U.S. Federal Reserve add more uncertainty. A possible Fed rate cut, expected at 0.25 percentage points, may weaken the U.S. dollar and reduce the massive interest rate gap between the two countries, a shift widely viewed as favorable for Brazil.


Survey Reveals a Country Split Between Anxiety and Optimism

New findings from the Ipsos Cost of Living Monitor 2025 highlight the paradox of Brazilian public sentiment.

According to the survey, 35% of Brazilians say they are in a difficult or very difficult financial situation, well above the global average of 27%. Yet the same 35% believe their income will increase next year, making Brazilians more optimistic than most of the world.

The divergence between perception and economic indicators is striking. Brazil is the only country among the 30 surveyed where the population blames high interest rates, not global conditions or national policies, for personal financial hardship. This reflects a cultural reality: Brazilians strongly associate financial pressure with the cost of installment plans and consumer credit.

Confusion over broader economic conditions is also clear. 36% of Brazilians believe the country is in a recession, even though Brazil has not entered a technical recession since 2020. Meanwhile, 66% expect interest rates to rise next year, despite forecasts showing the opposite.

Brazil’s unemployment rate stood at 5.6% in the three-month period ending in September, according to the IBGE’s continuous household survey. This marks the third consecutive quarter at 5.6%, matching the lowest rate ever recorded since the indicator began in 2002. A year earlier, the rate was 6.4%.

In total, 6.45 million people were unemployed, the lowest level in the historical series. This represents a 3.3% drop compared to the previous quarter and an 11.8% decrease relative to the same period in 2024. The IBGE also reported a record number of formal jobs, with 39.2 million workers holding signed work contracts.

Total real income reached R$ 354.6 billion, another record, with 5.5% annual growth.

These record lows in unemployment levels, record income, and record formal employment contrasts with earlier predictions that Brazil was heading toward an economic “abyss.” Those predictions, made by economists mostly linked to the Brazilian financial market and also to the country's right-wing candidates, especially those who want Tarcísio de Freitas as president in 2027, have been getting their predictions about the country wrong for yearsIn this case, 2025 was no different.

The year of 2025 in Brazil was marked by stock market highs, a stable exchange rate, and criticism of political narratives that predict national collapse of an economy that is functioning reasonably well.

Thus, the Ipsos survey indicates that this blend of caution and hope reveals a deeper pattern: Brazilians often expect the macroeconomy to worsen — perhaps because they spend the entire year listening to catastrophic predictions for the national economy in the mainstream media —, even as they believe their own lives will improve. But until lower interest rates and tax changes show up — the country implemented a major tax reform this year — in household budgets, the gap between perception and economic data is likely to persist. 

Monday, 8 December 2025

Political Shockwaves: How Brazil's 2026 Election Uncertainty Sent the Ibovespa Plunging and Hiked Selic Rate Forecasts

Brazilian financial markets experienced one of their most turbulent sessions in recent history last Friday, as political developments in Brasília reignited deep-seated concerns over fiscal policy, monetary strategy, and long-term economic planning. The market's reaction was swift and severe: the benchmark Ibovespa index suffered a dramatic drop — after a series of record highs, the Ibovespa B3 experienced a drop of more than 4% —, while the Central Bank's latest Focus Report reflected this new wave of instability by signaling higher expectations for the Selic rate in 2026. This shift underscores how political uncertainty in Brazil directly translates into heightened risk premiums and a more restrictive monetary outlook.

Political Volatility Reshapes Monetary Outlook

For weeks, the financial community had been anticipating a potential easing cycle in Brazil's monetary policy, hoping for lower interest rates ahead. However, Friday’s political shock abruptly reshaped these expectations.

The catalyst was the early, and later confirmed, report that Flávio Bolsonaro would be the chosen presidential candidate for the 2026 election. This news immediately fueled investor anxiety regarding economic unpredictability, particularly concerning fiscal management in a potential 2027 administration led by the candidate.

The weekly Focus Report, compiled from projections by over 100 financial institutions, now signals a reversal of the recent downward trend in interest rate forecasts. A month prior, the market projected the Selic rate to end 2026 at 12.25%. Following the political sell-off, projections have jumped, reflecting the market's need to price in additional risk.

The Ibovespa's Steepest Decline Since 2021

The Ibovespa had been on a record-setting streak, briefly touching 165,000 points early in the session. The news of the potential Bolsonaro-aligned candidacy triggered a swift and severe reversal, resulting in one of the index's sharpest single-day drops since 2021.

The index plunged from nearly 165,000 points to 154,000 points. This massive sell-off was driven by fears that a politically motivated administration could undermine fiscal predictability, especially when compared to expectations surrounding other potential contenders, such as São Paulo governor Tarcísio de Freitas, who is widely viewed by markets as a more technocratic and fiscally disciplined option — in fact, Tarcísio de Freitas is even more radical than Bolsonaro when it comes to the economy. In São Paulo, the government even privatized the water supplier company (Sabesp). The governor also established a public security policy marked by dozens of cases of police brutality. There were cases where police officers threw a citizen off a bridge and also a police operation in Guarujá, in the Baixada Santista region, where 38 people from a poor community were killed by the police. On that occasion, Tarcísio said he was "extremely satisfied" with the police action.

Analysts highlight that the connection between political risk and monetary policy is direct: political uncertainty and a lack of clarity on economic plans increase the country's risk premium. The Central Bank, in turn, tracks these risks closely, as political turbulence affects asset pricing, the currency, and overall investor confidence. Consequently, expectations of unstable fiscal policy push long-term interest rates higher, forcing the market to price in a higher Selic rate to compensate for the added risk.

Focus Report Quantifies Risk: Higher Selic in 2025

The latest Focus Report, released this week, provides a clear quantification of the market's revised expectations. While inflation and GDP growth forecasts remain relatively stable, the outlook for the Selic rate has been revised upwards for 2025.

Metric

2024/Forecast

2025/Forecast

Inflation (IPCA)

4.40%

4.16%

GDP Growth

2.25%

1.80%

Exchange Rate (BRL/USD)

5.40

5.50

Selic Rate

N/A

12.25% (Revised Up)

Source: Central Bank Focus Report, December 2025

The upward revision of the Selic rate for 2025 (from 12.00% to 12.25%) confirms that the market is now less certain about the speed and depth of the current interest-rate cutting cycle. Analysts broadly expect rate cuts to resume in 2025, but the political noise has pushed the anticipated start date from January to March.

Structural Hurdles: Why Brazil's Interest Rates Remain High

The recent volatility has forcefully resurfaced the broader debate over Brazil's structural economic challenges. Despite a global trend toward lower policy rates, Brazil remains burdened by high structural rates due to several persistent factors:
  1. Low Productivity and Supply Constraints: The country's economic structure lacks dynamism and struggles to adjust supply to rising demand, making it highly susceptible to inflationary pressures.
  2. Tight Inflation Target: The inflation target was arbitrarily lowered during the Temer administration (from 4% with a 2-point band to 3% with a 1.5-point band) without corresponding structural improvements in the economy.
  3. Aggressive Monetary Response: A tighter inflation target necessitates a more aggressive interest-rate response from the Central Bank, even when inflation is driven by supply-side issues rather than excess demand.
In essence, Brazil's combination of low productivity, deindustrialization, and a narrow inflation band all contribute to keeping interest rates stubbornly high, making the economy highly sensitive to political risk.

Navigating the Political-Economic Crossroads

The immediate future holds a high-stakes "Super Wednesday" with key decisions from both the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) and Brazil's Monetary Policy Committee (COPOM). The Fed is widely expected to cut rates, which would ease pressure on emerging markets. While COPOM is not expected to signal immediate cuts, analysts will scrutinize its tone for any subtle shift that might leave the door open for reductions later in 2025.

While Friday’s drop may have been an overreaction, early trading this week showed a partial recovery, with long-term yields dropping and the Ibovespa attempting a rebound. Nevertheless, markets will remain in a holding pattern, highly sensitive to both the COPOM decision and any further developments in the volatile political landscape ahead of the 2026 elections.

Thursday, 6 February 2020

Brazilian BC cuts Selic and rate drops to historical level of 4.25% per year

The Monetary Policy Committee (Copom) of the Central Bank (BC) of Brazil decided to reduce the basic interest rate, the Selic, from 4.5% to 4.25% per year. This is the lowest Selic rate since 1999 when Brazil adopted the monetary policy of inflation targeting.

The expectation of financial market specialists in Brazil is that the Selic will only rise again in 2021. In a statement, the Copom stated that its next steps "will continue depending on the evolution of economic activity, the balance of risks and the projections and expectations of inflation, with increasing weight for the calendar year 2021".

In general, the Brazilian financial market understood the new cut as a wise decision by the Brazilian Central Bank, as it will reduce interest rates and may positively impact the productive sectors of the economy, which, in turn, may increase the generation of jobs in Brazil. The measure also helps to lower the country's public debt costs.

Despite the Selic cut, market interest rates remain exorbitant in Brazil. According to an article published in the Jornal dos Economistas, written by the national coordinator of the Brazilian Citizen Debt Audit, Maria Lucia Fattorelli, the fault lies with the Brazilian Central Bank itself.

She believes that "the financial market charges interest as it sees fit on loans, overdraft, credit card etc. First, because there is no regulation that limits interest: it should be noted that since 2003, part of Article 192 of the Brazilian Constitution that limited real interest to 12%, above which the practice of usury would be configured ".

Wednesday, 30 October 2019

Copom reduces basic interest rates of the Brazilian economy to the lowest level in history: 5% per year; the rate is expected to continue to be reduced at future meetings

For the third time in a row, in a decision that was already expected by financial analysts, the Brazilian Central Bank (BC) lowered the basic interest rates of the economy. Unanimously, the Monetary Policy Committee (Copom) reduced the Selic rate to 5% per year, with a 0.5 percentage point cut.

With today's decision, Selic reached its lowest level since the beginning of the Central Bank's historical series in 1986. From October 2012 to April 2013, the rate was maintained at 7.25% per year and has now been readjusted. gradually until it reached 14.25% per annum in July 2015. In October 2016, the Copom again reduced the basic interest rates of the economy until the rate reached 6.5% per annum in March 2018. Now the country reached 5% per annum.

At the meeting of the Monetary Policy Council (Copom) of the Brazilian Central Bank, which took place today, a new 0.50 pp cut in the Selic rate was practically anticipated at the next meeting, in December 2019. The Copom also introduced, in the balance sheet risks, the lagged effects of the stimulating monetary policy (upward risk of inflation) and mentioned that the current stage of the economic cycle recommends caution in any further adjustments in the degree of the stimulus.

The minute of the Copom meeting also pointed to projections for the 2020 IPCA between 0.30 pp and 0.40 pp below the 4.0% target. Therefore, the Selic terminal is expected to be between 4.0% and 4.5% in the coming months. More cuts thus likely as reforms go through, according to the Copom minute. 

Monday, 9 September 2019

Bradesco (BBDC4) estimates that the basic interest rate of the Brazilian economy, the Selic, could close 2019 at 4.75%

Banco Bradesco revised its forecast for Brazil's basic interest rate, Selic. Now the bank's expectation is that Selic will close 2019 at 4.75% and remain at this level until the end of 2020. The previous forecast was that interest would be at 5%.

For Bradesco, the Monetary Policy Committee (Copom) of the Brazilian Central Bank should promote two further cuts of 0.50 percentage points in the September and October meetings. Afterward, Bradesco believes that the Copom will reduce 0.25 percentage points in the December meeting. That would lead to 4.75% the rate that currently stands at 6%.

This bet by Bradesco increases the pressure on the Copom and the Brazilian Central Bank, as it adds to the criticism that many economists are making against the current government's economic policy.

For economist Laura Carvalho, for example, the Copom "amid high unemployment, economic stagnation, rising wage inequalities, and below-target inflation expectations, waited" until the end of July 2019 to reduce unemployment. Selic rate by 0.5 percentage point to 6% per annum.

So far, the fall of Selic and the approval of the Social Security Reform have not been enough to leverage the Brazilian GDP. Jair Bolsonaro's government has so far presented no plans to reactivate the Brazilian economy. This, coupled with the absurd statements of both the president and ministers of his government, make the future scenario of the Brazilian economy even more uncertain.

Friday, 2 August 2019

After cutting the basic interest rate from 6.5% to 6% per year, Selic, by Copom, the Brazilian Central Bank takes a more "dovish" stance

The Monetary Policy Committee (Copom) of the Brazilian Central Bank reduced from 6.5% to 6% per year the basic interest rate, the Selic rate. The cut aims to increase the possibility of further economic growth in Brazil.

According to bank XP, the ruling shows that the central bank has taken a more "dovish" stance, that is, more lenient about inflation.

For professor Paulo Feldmann, from USP's School of Economics, Administration, and Accounting (FEA), “average income has fallen a lot, 1.3% a year ago. If we consider that in this period there was inflation around 5%, the fall in average income is even greater, around 6%. That is, people have less income to consume.”

Feldmann believes that reducing to Selic is not enough. For him, "the Brazilian Central Bank should act by forcing a reduction in interest rates for loans to both individuals and companies. It is very illusory to think that now that Selic has fallen to 6% Brazil will grow."

Tuesday, 30 July 2019

Cost of living in Brazil: IGP-M slows in July, a rising dollar and financial market betting massively on Selic interest rate cut

According to the Getulio Vargas Foundation (FGV), the General Price Index - Market (IGP-M) decelerated to 0.40% in July after showing a high of 0.80% in June. With the July result, the IGP-M accumulated high of 4.79% in the year and 6.39% in 12 months.

Meanwhile, the Brazilian financial market is betting heavily on the 0.50% cut in the economy's base interest rate, the Selic, which is currently at 6.50%.

Some more cautious analysts believe that the Brazilian Central Bank, at the next Copom meeting to be held tomorrow, July 31, should cut Selic by only 0.25%, leaving the annual interest rate at 6.25% per year in Brazil.

The dollar price in Brazil closed again high yesterday, July 29. The US currency ended the day at 0.29% appreciation, selling at R$ 3.7830.

Tuesday, 23 July 2019

Cost of living in Brazil: fall in fuel prices causes the Extended National Consumer Price Index 15 (IPCA-15) to rise only 0.09% in July

Increases in airfare and electricity prices in Brazil were not sufficient to produce a big rise in inflation in July 2019. The Broad National Consumer Price Index 15 (IPCA-15) rose 0.09% in July after registering an even lower growth of 0.06% in June. The main factor for this very small growth was the fall in fuel prices.

With a stable IPCA, several Brazilian economists are betting on a 0.25% reduction in the basic interest rates of the economy (Selic). IPCA closes June up just 0.01%, reflecting weak demand and the contraction in food and fuel prices. Without cost-of-living pressure, analysts are predicting a drop of at least 0.25 percentage points in the Selic rate at the next Copom meeting in the last two days of July. Currently, the Selic rate is at 6.5% per year.

With Selic at this level in Brazil, fixed-income investments such as savings, floating-rate CDBs, DI funds, and Selic Treasury bonds pay less, as their yields are pegged to the Selic rate.

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