Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil Holds Selic At 15% For Third Meeting, Signaling A Long, Tight Vigil On Prices


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's central bank has kept the Selic rate at 15% for a third straight meeting, the highest since 2006.

Think of Selic as the economy's master switch: it sets the tone for everything from mortgages and car loans to the return on savings and government bonds.

Holding it this high means credit stays expensive, but inflation expectations-still above target-face sustained pressure to come down.

Why stay put now? First, prices are cooling, but not convincingly enough; services remain sticky because jobs and wages have held up.

Second, global uncertainty-tight U.S. financial conditions, trade frictions, and periodic risk-off swings-can punish emerging markets that cut too early.

Third, the bank has spelled out a strategy: keep policy restrictive“for a prolonged period” so inflation actually converges to target, not just flirts with it.

The story behind the story is about credibility. Brazil has lived through cycles where quick fixes-cheap public credit, price interventions, or loose budgets-delivered short sugar highs and long hangovers.


Brazil Holds Selic At 15% For Third Meeting, Signaling A Long, Tight Vigil On Prices
Today's stance leans toward rules, predictability, and market trust: a promise that price stability comes first, and that cheaper money will be earned, not declared.

That approach tends to lower the“country risk” premium over time, support the currency, and anchor investment decisions-provided fiscal policy doesn't work at cross-purposes.

For expats and foreign readers, here's the practical lens. Borrowing in Brazil will remain costly; if you must finance, compare fixed-rate options and avoid floating exposures where possible.

Savers and institutions benefit from high carry in local fixed income, especially short-duration and Selic-linked assets.

Corporates will prioritize productivity investments and healthier balance sheets over debt-driven expansion.

The currency may stay steadier with high real rates, but big global moves can still spill over.

What to watch next: inflation expectations (do they finally settle at target), the fiscal path (credible budgets versus headline promises), and global rates.

If those fall into place, rate cuts can start without risking a relapse. Until then, Brazil is choosing steadiness over spectacle-betting that patience now prevents costlier corrections later and sets the stage for growth built on sound footing rather than shortcuts.

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The Rio Times

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