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Brazil’s Hawkish Rate Hike Fails to Stem Market Selloff
(Bloomberg) -- Traders dubbed Brazil’s central bank hawkish turn “a shock and awe” move that would lift the nation’s battered assets. A day later, the market is signaling it’s not enough.
The Brazilian real closed the session 0.5% lower, the worst among emerging currencies, after falling as much as 1.4% earlier. The slide came even after policymakers on Wednesday delivered a 100 basis point interest-rate hike and pledged two more increases of the same magnitude by March. Stocks slumped 2.7% in the worst day since January 2023.
The central bank’s hawkish turn in which policymakers pledged to take the benchmark Selic to 14.25% in the coming months should have offered support to the battered currency. But Brazil’s swelling budget deficit continues to weigh on markets, pushing longer-dated swap rates up even as after policymakers’ commitment to bringing inflation expectations back on track.
Swaps rose across the curve Thursday, with contracts due in 2027 jumping 70 basis points during the session.
“Clearly the central bank’s move wasn’t enough,” Solange Srour, head of Brazil macroeconomics at UBS Global Wealth Management. “The monetary authority can’t solve the problem alone, even by hiking rates.”
In the statement accompanying the decision — the last chaired by Governor Roberto Campos Neto, who’s set to be replaced by Gabriel Galipolo — policymakers emphasized that the government’s recently announced fiscal package “significantly impacted asset prices and expectations, especially the risk premium, inflation expectations and the exchange rate.”
Mauricio Bernardo, rates manager at Vinland Capital, said the central bank’s move was a “firm response” to worsening expectations and leaves the scenario less uncertain for when Galipolo comes in next year.
Traders are also closely monitoring the health of President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who underwent another surgery Thursday morning. The procedure was successful and Lula should be discharged from the hospital at the beginning of next week, his doctor told journalists at the hospital in Sao Paulo.
Later on Thursday, Communications Minister Paulo Pimenta said Lula will run for reelection in 2026, a decision that could further weigh on assets.
After the fiscal package was unveiled in November, the real sold off to a record low as investors grew increasingly worried by the country’s fiscal outlook. The currency is down 19% this year, the worst among majors.
The nation’s fiscal situation remains the focus for investors.
“Whether that lasts or not, will depend on fiscal policy over the next few months,” said Savio Barbosa, economist at Kinitro Capital. “If policy becomes more expansionist, any improvement in assets may be short-lived”
(Updates market moves starting in deck headline)