Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil's Market Survey Extends Inflation Decline But Keeps Rates High


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's Central Bank released its weekly Focus survey on August 25, showing inflation expectations dropping for the thirteenth week in a row. The median forecast for consumer prices in 2025 fell from 4.95 percent to 4.86 percent.

Brazil's official target is 3.0 percent, with a tolerance band of 1.5 to 4.5 percent. Expectations remain just above that ceiling, which means the Central Bank faces little room to lower interest rates soon.

The Selic rate, Brazil 's key policy rate, stays projected at 15.0 percent for 2025. Markets expect only gradual cuts later, with 12.5 percent in 2026, 10.5 percent in 2027, and 10.0 percent in 2028.

These figures suggest that even with lower inflation estimates, the high cost of borrowing will continue to shape business decisions, investments, and household budgets.

Growth forecasts also edged lower. Analysts cut 2025 GDP from 2.21 percent to 2.18 percent, with only 1.86 percent expected in 2026. Predictions hold steady at 1.87 percent in 2027 and 2.0 percent in 2028, showing little confidence in stronger expansion.



This combination of slowing growth and high rates highlights the challenge of balancing price stability with economic momentum. Currency projections remain steady, with the dollar expected at 5.59 reais in 2025 and around 5.60 through 2028.

This stability signals no major shifts in external accounts, but it also reflects modest growth expectations. Other inflation measures also softened. The IGP-M, often used in rental and utility contracts, dropped to 1.04 percent for 2025.

Administered prices inside the IPCA, such as electricity and fuel, fell to 4.70 percent. Both adjustments point to weaker cost pressures ahead, which may ease conditions for businesses and households over time.

The story behind the numbers is one of cautious disinflation with little immediate relief. Prices are moving in the right direction, but not fast enough to bring them inside the official target band. Until that happens, interest rates remain stuck at punishingly high levels.

For businesses, that means credit stays expensive. For households, borrowing costs weigh on spending. And for Brazil's economy as a whole, the risk is that growth slows before inflation truly settles.

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The Rio Times

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