Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazilian Stocks Rebound As Election Jitters Ease Ahead Of Super Wednesday


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Ibovespa claws back part of Friday's heavy loss as investors bet on a calmer centre-right path for 2026.
  • Markets brace for“Super Wednesday”, with the Fed and Brazil's central bank set to signal the next phase of global monetary policy.
  • A broad technical uptrend on B3 remains intact, but volatility around politics and commodities keeps stock picking crucial.

    After one of the sharpest single-day drops in years, Brazil's stock market started the week in repair mode. The Ibovespa rose 0.52% on Monday to 158,187 points, while the dollar slipped 0.20% to around R$5.42, as investors reassessed the political and monetary landscape.

    The immediate spark was the signal from Senator Flávio Bolsonaro that he may abandon his 2026 presidential pre-candidacy in exchange for support for an amnesty for those charged over the 8 January 2023 riots, including his father.

    The possibility of avoiding a bruising family-driven campaign reopened space for a more market-friendly centre-right candidacy and eased fears of a new round of polarisation with the current left-wing government.

    At the same time, traders are firmly focused on“Super Wednesday”. The Federal Reserve is expected to cut US rates by 0.25 percentage point, while Brazil's Copom should keep Selic at 15% but may hint at the start of an easing cycle in early 2026 if inflation and growth numbers continue to cool.



    The index's strong performance this year still leans on the prospect of lower rates after a long period of fiscal noise and heavy taxation debate in Brasília.

    Global markets were more cautious. Wall Street indices slipped, European stocks edged lower and Asian bourses closed mixed, all in wait-and-see mode.

    Brent crude fell to about $62.50 a barrel, but Petrobras preferred shares still gained more than 1%, supported by domestic positioning. Iron ore around $101 a tonne weighed on Vale, which slipped back below R$70.

    Stock selection was decisive. On the upside, IRB Brasil, Raízen, Cyrela, SLC Agrícola and BB Seguridade led gains, driven by upgrades, short-covering and optimism around local cyclicals.

    Hapvida, Assaí, Natura, Hypera and Rumo sat at the bottom of the table, reflecting regulatory pressure, legal overhangs, profit-taking and sensitivity to weaker commodity and trade flows.

    Technically, the Ibovespa remains in a solid long-term uptrend, but the recent“Flávio shock” shows how quickly politics and global rates can still shake Brazilian risk assets.

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  • The Rio Times

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