Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Ibovespa's Record Run Shows Investors Back Discipline Over Rhetoric


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Ibovespa set a fresh record above 161,700 points as dividend-heavy blue chips pulled money into Brazil despite political noise.
  • Steel, oil and petrochemicals led gains, while big banks, construction and the B3 exchange itself were used as funding for profit-taking.
  • Technical signals are stretched, but strong foreign ETF inflows and still-cheap valuations suggest consolidation rather than a sudden reversal.

    The Brazilian stock market is trading in uncharted territory. After closing Wednesday at 161,755 points, its second record in as many sessions, the Ibovespa is hovering near 162,000 in early trade.

    The dollar eased to about R$5.31, reflecting renewed appetite for risk as global interest-rate expectations soften. The external backdrop has been unusually friendly.

    Weak US private-sector jobs data reinforced the odds of another Federal Reserve rate cut next week, sending Wall Street to fresh highs and pushing investors toward higher-yielding markets.



    European shares edged up, Japan's Nikkei climbed on tech strength and only Hong Kong lagged as traders locked in profits. At home, three forces are driving the rally.
    Brazil stocks surge on payouts
    Companies are rushing to distribute cash before a new dividend-tax regime takes effect, while buybacks hit record levels. Brazil's economy is hardly booming, with GDP growing slowly, but unemployment has fallen to multi-year lows and corporate earnings remain resilient.

    And despite Brasília's noisy debates over taxes, spending caps and impeachment rules, investors see a business sector that is cutting costs and rewarding shareholders, even when the political class leans toward heavier state intervention.

    Vale's investor day in New York, with firm production targets and a pledge to keep payouts generous, set the tone. Usiminas and CSN rode the same wave, leading Ibovespa gains.

    Prio jumped after a sharp rise in oil output, and Braskem rallied on signs its ownership saga may finally move toward a more stable structure.

    On the losing side, housing name Direcional, lender Bradesco, wholesaler Assaí and the B3 exchange itself all slipped as traders rotated out of domestic defensives.

    Technically, the index looks overbought: weekly and daily relative-strength indicators sit in the high 70s, and prices hug the upper Bollinger bands. Yet foreign inflows into Brazil ETFs remain strong and valuations still trail US peers.

    That combination points less to a bubble than to a market that may need a pause - not a change of direction - as investors continue to favor companies that deliver profits over ideology.

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  • The Rio Times

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