Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil's High-Rate Standoff Meets A Softer Fed: UBS Sees Six Pivotal Months


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil heads into October with an unusual split: its central bank is holding the Selic at 15.00%, one of the highest real interest rates among major economies, just as the U.S. Federal Reserve has begun cutting.

That divergence-tight at home, easing abroad-will shape Brazil's currency, bonds, and stocks as the 2026 election season slowly comes into view.

On the ground, the economy is expanding but losing steam. In the second quarter, GDP rose 0.4% from the prior quarter, led by services and industry.

Unemployment is about 5.6%, the lowest since the current series began, while headline inflation briefly dipped in August before core measures stayed positive.

Those readings explain the central bank 's stance: keep policy restrictive long enough to lock in disinflation, but watch for space to pivot if growth cools without rekindling prices.



UBS's message to investors is straightforward. If the Fed keeps trimming and the dollar softens, capital tends to favor markets with high real yields and credible policy-Brazil fits that bill.

A firmer real would ease imported inflation and, together with slower domestic activity, could open the door to rate cuts in 2026.
Fiscal Credibility to Shape Brazil's Market Outlook
In that setup, UBS sees room for Brazilian equities, keeps inflation-linked bonds attractive as protection, prefers post-fixed instruments over long pre-fixed exposure for now, and nudges nominal bonds to neutral until the timing of cuts is clearer.

The story behind the story is political and fiscal credibility. Early polling hints at a tight 2026 race. Markets will look past campaign noise and zero in on budget math, debt anchors, and the likely shape of an economic team.

A steady fiscal signal preserves Brazil's risk premium and keeps the path open to a controlled easing cycle; a wobble would lift borrowing costs quickly and test the currency.

Why this matters beyond Brazil: it is a template for emerging markets in a turning global cycle. If Brazil manages a clean handoff-from“very tight” policy to gradual cuts under a softer dollar-it shows how to protect price stability without crushing growth.

If it stumbles, the lesson will travel just as fast through EM funds, commodity prices, and exchange rates.

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