Berliner Boersenzeitung - Brazil hikes interest rate, signals may tighten further

EUR -
AED 4.014219
AFN 74.03685
ALL 98.806322
AMD 423.007396
ANG 1.972415
AOA 997.259158
ARS 1065.298736
AUD 1.623767
AWG 1.967738
AZN 1.824998
BAM 1.95724
BBD 2.209727
BDT 130.776231
BGN 1.95588
BHD 0.411994
BIF 3228.549554
BMD 1.092884
BND 1.429491
BOB 7.589758
BRL 6.133044
BSD 1.094455
BTN 91.974437
BWP 14.524153
BYN 3.581599
BYR 21420.530111
BZD 2.206024
CAD 1.506514
CDF 3145.320454
CHF 0.939618
CLF 0.036845
CLP 1016.666401
CNY 7.73839
CNH 7.745691
COP 4586.627295
CRC 565.331513
CUC 1.092884
CUP 28.961431
CVE 110.348723
CZK 25.270794
DJF 194.882318
DKK 7.460367
DOP 65.890294
DZD 145.660711
EGP 53.097752
ERN 16.393263
ETB 131.056133
FJD 2.457624
FKP 0.836241
GBP 0.836608
GEL 2.96724
GGP 0.836241
GHS 17.461248
GIP 0.836241
GMD 74.892884
GNF 9442.42332
GTQ 8.462149
GYD 228.963719
HKD 8.488377
HNL 27.222027
HRK 7.528912
HTG 144.191379
HUF 400.606504
IDR 17048.337623
ILS 4.107152
IMP 0.836241
INR 91.882107
IQD 1433.66807
IRR 46013.158877
ISK 149.508071
JEP 0.836241
JMD 173.263043
JOD 0.774528
JPY 163.284557
KES 141.167708
KGS 93.443556
KHR 4446.434611
KMF 491.248411
KPW 983.595524
KRW 1483.803376
KWD 0.335122
KYD 0.911979
KZT 529.874752
LAK 23997.536698
LBP 98004.499513
LKR 320.34745
LRD 211.216388
LSL 19.124172
LTL 3.227003
LVL 0.661075
LYD 5.239095
MAD 10.731943
MDL 19.31592
MGA 5028.861495
MKD 61.531429
MMK 3549.645216
MNT 3713.620506
MOP 8.759326
MRU 43.32607
MUR 50.513261
MVR 16.775534
MWK 1897.757224
MXN 21.043955
MYR 4.69506
MZN 69.832342
NAD 19.123647
NGN 1779.892945
NIO 40.27166
NOK 11.737314
NPR 147.165677
NZD 1.794243
OMR 0.420705
PAB 1.094405
PEN 4.0766
PGK 4.304305
PHP 62.818435
PKR 303.793763
PLN 4.290085
PYG 8541.676104
QAR 3.989799
RON 4.974773
RSD 117.017331
RUB 105.08998
RWF 1473.631553
SAR 4.103841
SBD 9.070203
SCR 14.885785
SDG 657.37707
SEK 11.360662
SGD 1.427531
SHP 0.836241
SLE 24.969456
SLL 22917.231512
SOS 625.480285
SRD 34.913827
STD 22620.496194
SVC 9.576134
SYP 2745.904605
SZL 19.11768
THB 36.253705
TJS 11.665938
TMT 3.836024
TND 3.368948
TOP 2.559641
TRY 37.446065
TTD 7.428534
TWD 35.178818
TZS 2974.277799
UAH 45.066105
UGX 4022.051597
USD 1.092884
UYU 45.763675
UZS 13973.41007
VEF 3959030.38985
VES 42.444365
VND 27160.904315
VUV 129.749439
WST 3.06137
XAF 656.461075
XAG 0.034713
XAU 0.00041
XCD 2.953574
XDR 0.814125
XOF 656.470092
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.603962
ZAR 19.087386
ZMK 9837.270256
ZMW 28.919603
ZWL 351.908263
  • BCC

    3.4200

    142.37

    +2.4%

  • RBGPF

    1.7400

    61.23

    +2.84%

  • RIO

    0.3900

    67.23

    +0.58%

  • SCS

    0.3100

    12.91

    +2.4%

  • CMSC

    0.1200

    24.71

    +0.49%

  • NGG

    0.5600

    66.24

    +0.85%

  • BCE

    0.1600

    33.02

    +0.48%

  • BTI

    0.0700

    35.18

    +0.2%

  • GSK

    -0.3800

    38.83

    -0.98%

  • BP

    -0.2300

    32.11

    -0.72%

  • CMSD

    0.1800

    24.95

    +0.72%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.25

    +0.23%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.01

    +0.14%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    9.65

    -0.93%

  • RELX

    0.4700

    46.83

    +1%

  • AZN

    0.4800

    77.35

    +0.62%

Brazil hikes interest rate, signals may tighten further
Brazil hikes interest rate, signals may tighten further / Photo: Sergio LIMA - AFP/File

Brazil hikes interest rate, signals may tighten further

Brazil's central bank raised its benchmark interest rate for the 12th straight time Wednesday, citing an "adverse and volatile" global economy, and indicated its tightening cycle, one of the world's most aggressive, may not be over.

Text size:

The bank's monetary policy committee raised the benchmark Selic rate by half a percentage point, to 13.75 percent, in line with market expectations.

And though many analysts had forecast Brazil's hawkish rate hikes would stop there, the bank said stubbornly high inflation meant more could be in store.

"The committee will evaluate the need for a residual adjustment of lesser magnitude at its next meeting" from September 20 to 21, it said in a statement.

"The external environment remains adverse and volatile, with larger downward revisions of the global economic growth outlook in an inflationary environment that is still under pressure," it added.

"The uncertainty of the current economic situation, both domestic and global... demands extra caution."

The decision was unanimous by the committee's nine members, it said.

The key interest rate now stands at its highest level since January 2017.

- End near? -

Haunted by a history of hyperinflation, Brazil -- Latin America's biggest economy -- reacted fast and aggressively to the global price surges unleashed by the coronavirus pandemic and then Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Since March 2021, the central bank has rapidly raised the Selic from an all-time low of two percent, which it had introduced to stimulate the pandemic-battered economy.

That included three whopping hikes of 1.5 percentage points from October 2021 to February 2022, followed by two one-percentage-point increases.

Now, Brazil is weighing when to bring its hawkish cycle to an end, just as policy makers in other major economies shift their monetary tightening into high gear.

The US Federal Reserve hiked its benchmark rate by 0.75 point last week, the fourth straight increase. The week before, the European Central Bank raised its key rate by 0.5 point, the first increase since 2011.

Annual inflation remains high in Brazil, at 11.89 percent in June -- way above the central bank's target of 3.5 percent.

But analysts polled by the central bank forecast the inflation rate will fall to 7.15 percent by the end of the year.

The same poll found analysts expect the central bank's tightening cycle is nearly over: they gave an average forecast of 13.75 percent for the Selic rate at year's end.

- Business world criticizes -

Even as the bank's policy makers try to slow runaway prices by hiking interest rates, they are wary of tipping the economy into a recession by slamming the brakes on too hard.

The central bank is facing calls to ease up on its rate increases.

"Since December, the real interest rate has been at a level that is inhibiting economic activity," the chief economic analyst at Brazil's powerful National Confederation of Industry (CNI), Marcelo Azevedo, said in a recent statement.

The CNI called Wednesday's hike "wrong."

A 0.4-percent month-on-month fall in Brazilian industrial production in June and other "softer surveys" last month indicate the economy is losing steam, said William Jackson, chief emerging markets economist at consulting firm Capital Economics.

Analysts polled by the central bank forecast Brazil's GDP growth will come in at 1.97 percent for the year, after an expansion of 4.6 percent last year and a contraction of 3.9 percent in pandemic-stricken 2020.

Brazil's economy grew by one percent in the first quarter, but experts warn the second half of the year looks bleaker.

With soaring prices for food and fuel hurting Brazilian families, the weak economy has become a major liability for President Jair Bolsonaro as he campaigns for reelection this October.

The far-right incumbent trails leftist ex-president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva by 47 percent to 29 percent, according to the latest poll from the Datafolha institute.

(U.Gruber--BBZ)