Brazil's External Gap Narrows Sharply: Investment Surge Sends A Bullish Signal
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) São Paulo - Brazil's external accounts improved in August, with the current account deficit narrowing more than expected and foreign direct investment comfortably covering the shortfall, according to figures released Friday.
The mix is supportive for the real and local risk assets, even as a firmer U.S. macro pulse keeps global dollar pressure in play.
At 07:30 local time, the central bank reported a current account deficit of $4.67 billion for August, beating the consensus call for a $5.50 billion gap and improving from July's $7.07 billion shortfall.
Foreign direct investment reached $7.99 billion, above the $6.20 billion expected and only slightly below July's $8.32 billion. By simple coverage, FDI financed 171% of the current account gap (7.99/4.67), leaving a positive basic balance (FDI minus current account) of roughly $3.32 billion.
The improvement likely reflects a smaller drag from primary income remittances alongside a still-solid goods surplus typical of late-Q3 seasonality, though detailed line items were not released alongside the headline print.
The composition matters: FDI is generally longer-horizon and less volatile than portfolio flows, signaling steady corporate reinvestment and greenfield activity rather than“hot money.”
Policy context remains nuanced after Thursday's mid-month inflation reading (IPCA-15) re-accelerated to 0.48% month-over-month and 5.32% year-over-year. That keeps inflation well above the 3% target and argues for caution in extending monetary easing.
The healthier external mix, however, gives the central bank marginal room to prioritize disinflation without triggering FX stress.
With ex-ante real rates compressed by firmer inflation, officials are unlikely to pre-commit to deeper cuts until underlying services and diffusion measures soften.
The global backdrop on Friday skewed dollar-supportive. In the United States, the PCE price index met expectations (core 0.2% m/m, 2.9% y/y), while personal income rose 0.4% and spending 0.6% in August.
The“soft-landing” combination-sticky growth with contained inflation-tends to keep U.S. yields firm and the dollar bid. In Europe, confidence signals were mixed. Italian BTP auctions tailed slightly higher in yield, reflecting cautious investor sentiment.
In Asia, Singapore's industrial output fell sharply both month-on-month and year-on-year, underscoring the uneven momentum in global manufacturing. Net-net, the external tone limited immediate BRL upside even as Brazil's own fundamentals brightened.
Market implications break along three lines: . FX: A cleaner funding picture is BRL-positive on a medium horizon. With FDI repeatedly covering the current account gap, the currency's downside should be better supported on pullbacks. Near term, dollar firmness argues for two-way trade and choppy ranges rather than an unbroken rally. . Rates: The front end of the DI curve remains anchored by inflation dynamics and central-bank communication. In the belly and long end, reduced external vulnerability argues against a sizeable risk-premium build-up; however, global term premium can still spill over if U.S. yields grind higher. . Equities and credit: Domestically oriented names and credits benefit from a narrower external gap and steadier funding. Exporters face opposing forces-revenue support from a stronger dollar versus potential multiple compression if global financial conditions tighten. Investors will watch three near-term signposts. First, the release of full August balance-of-payments details (services and income lines) and the September high-frequency trade trackers to test whether the improvement persists into Q4. Second, today's CFTC currency positioning due at 15:30 for evidence on speculative BRL exposure after recent swings (the last reading showed net longs around +62.2k). Third, any follow-up communication from the central bank and the National Monetary Council after this week's inflation and external prints, particularly on credit conditions and the reaction function. Bottom line: August's external accounts delivered quality improvement-smaller deficit, strong FDI, positive basic balance. That strengthens Brazil's cushion against global shocks and, over time, supports the real and local assets. But with inflation still running above target and the dollar underpinned by resilient U.S. data, policymakers and markets are likely to proceed carefully rather than declare victory.
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