Brazil's July Industry Slips As August Surveys Hint At Softer Contraction
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's economy showed mixed signals on Wednesday, with fresh official data confirming industrial weakness while private surveys suggested a slower pace of decline.
The statistics agency reported industrial production fell 0.2% in July from June and rose just 0.2% compared with a year earlier. That marks the fourth straight month without growth, reflecting the impact of expensive credit on output.
At the same time, S&P Global surveys showed business activity contracting at a slower pace in August. The Services PMI rose to 49.3 from 46.3, and the Composite PMI climbed to 48.8 from 46.6.
Both remain below the 50-point threshold that separates expansion from contraction, but the numbers show demand eroding less sharply than in July.
The broader picture remains one of a high-interest economy losing steam. In the second quarter, GDP rose 0.4% from the previous quarter, with services up 0.6%, industry up 0.5%, and agriculture down 0.1%.
Household consumption gained 0.5%, but investment fell 2.2% and government spending slipped 0.6%. The Central Bank has kept the Selic rate at 15%, far above inflation, in order to reinforce its 3% target.
Faced with stalled investment and costly borrowing at home, the Treasury has turned to international markets. On September 2 it launched a 30-year dollar bond, the Global 2056, with a 7.25% coupon and a 7.50% yield, while reopening a 2030 bond for USD 750 million at 5.20%.
Earlier in the year, it sold USD 2.5 billion of 2035 bonds in February and USD 2.75 billion across 2030 and 2035 maturities in June. This sequence makes 2025 Brazil's busiest year for foreign issuance since 2014.
The approach buys time, spreads repayments, and provides benchmarks for corporate borrowers. The trade-off is higher coupons, which the government accepts to secure liquidity and reduce rollover risk.
The story behind the story is pragmatic. Brazil is paying more to borrow abroad while its domestic economy slows under the weight of high rates. Services are cushioning industry, but momentum is fragile.
By issuing longer-dated debt, Brasília is securing financing now in hopes that easing inflation will eventually allow interest rates to come down.
For international investors, the message is straightforward: Brazil is keeping its market doors open, even at a higher cost, to safeguard stability during a difficult cycle.
The statistics agency reported industrial production fell 0.2% in July from June and rose just 0.2% compared with a year earlier. That marks the fourth straight month without growth, reflecting the impact of expensive credit on output.
At the same time, S&P Global surveys showed business activity contracting at a slower pace in August. The Services PMI rose to 49.3 from 46.3, and the Composite PMI climbed to 48.8 from 46.6.
Both remain below the 50-point threshold that separates expansion from contraction, but the numbers show demand eroding less sharply than in July.
The broader picture remains one of a high-interest economy losing steam. In the second quarter, GDP rose 0.4% from the previous quarter, with services up 0.6%, industry up 0.5%, and agriculture down 0.1%.
Household consumption gained 0.5%, but investment fell 2.2% and government spending slipped 0.6%. The Central Bank has kept the Selic rate at 15%, far above inflation, in order to reinforce its 3% target.
Faced with stalled investment and costly borrowing at home, the Treasury has turned to international markets. On September 2 it launched a 30-year dollar bond, the Global 2056, with a 7.25% coupon and a 7.50% yield, while reopening a 2030 bond for USD 750 million at 5.20%.
Earlier in the year, it sold USD 2.5 billion of 2035 bonds in February and USD 2.75 billion across 2030 and 2035 maturities in June. This sequence makes 2025 Brazil's busiest year for foreign issuance since 2014.
The approach buys time, spreads repayments, and provides benchmarks for corporate borrowers. The trade-off is higher coupons, which the government accepts to secure liquidity and reduce rollover risk.
The story behind the story is pragmatic. Brazil is paying more to borrow abroad while its domestic economy slows under the weight of high rates. Services are cushioning industry, but momentum is fragile.
By issuing longer-dated debt, Brasília is securing financing now in hopes that easing inflation will eventually allow interest rates to come down.
For international investors, the message is straightforward: Brazil is keeping its market doors open, even at a higher cost, to safeguard stability during a difficult cycle.

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