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Brazil's Inflation Cools, But The Real Test Is Credibility
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Brazil's mid-month inflation gauge eased to 4.41% year-on-year, still above the 3% goal but just inside the official ceiling.
December's pressure came from travel and transport-airfares jumped 12.71%-while groceries kept falling in many staples.
With rates at 15%, the question for 2026 is not“can cuts start?” but“has inflation truly turned, especially in services?”
Brazil just delivered the kind of number that calms markets without letting anyone relax. The IPCA-15-an early read on consumer prices-rose 0.25% in December and 4.41% over the past 12 months, down from 4.50% previously.
It leaves inflation above the central bank 's 3.0% target, but narrowly below the 4.5% upper limit of the tolerance band. The headline looks technical.
The stakes are not. Brazil is running one of the highest policy rates in major economies: the Selic sits at 15%, near a two-decade high.
That level shapes everything foreigners care about-currency stability, the cost of credit, the pace of investment, and whether Brazil can keep financing itself without frightening investors.
The month's inflation story is also a snapshot of how Brazil“feels” on the ground. Transport costs rose 0.69% and did most of the damage, with airfares surging 12.71% and ride-hailing prices up 9.00%.
Fuel was mixed: ethanol climbed 1.70%, gasoline edged up 0.11%, and diesel fell-helping stop the transport spike from spreading everywhere.
Meanwhile, the supermarket aisle told a different story. Food at home fell for a seventh straight month. Tomatoes dropped 14.53%, long-life milk fell 5.37%, and rice declined 2.37%.
Meat went the other way, up 1.54%, a reminder that disinflation is uneven and can reverse quickly. The“behind the story” is housing and administered costs.
Over the year, housing rose 6.69%, and residential electricity jumped 11.95%, keeping pressure on families even when some foods get cheaper. Markets now debate when easing begins in 2026-many leaning toward March rather than January.
The central bank's dilemma is simple: cut too early and credibility evaporates; wait too long and growth and credit suffer. The next checkpoint is the full December IPCA release on January 9, 2026.
Brazil's mid-month inflation gauge eased to 4.41% year-on-year, still above the 3% goal but just inside the official ceiling.
December's pressure came from travel and transport-airfares jumped 12.71%-while groceries kept falling in many staples.
With rates at 15%, the question for 2026 is not“can cuts start?” but“has inflation truly turned, especially in services?”
Brazil just delivered the kind of number that calms markets without letting anyone relax. The IPCA-15-an early read on consumer prices-rose 0.25% in December and 4.41% over the past 12 months, down from 4.50% previously.
It leaves inflation above the central bank 's 3.0% target, but narrowly below the 4.5% upper limit of the tolerance band. The headline looks technical.
The stakes are not. Brazil is running one of the highest policy rates in major economies: the Selic sits at 15%, near a two-decade high.
That level shapes everything foreigners care about-currency stability, the cost of credit, the pace of investment, and whether Brazil can keep financing itself without frightening investors.
The month's inflation story is also a snapshot of how Brazil“feels” on the ground. Transport costs rose 0.69% and did most of the damage, with airfares surging 12.71% and ride-hailing prices up 9.00%.
Fuel was mixed: ethanol climbed 1.70%, gasoline edged up 0.11%, and diesel fell-helping stop the transport spike from spreading everywhere.
Meanwhile, the supermarket aisle told a different story. Food at home fell for a seventh straight month. Tomatoes dropped 14.53%, long-life milk fell 5.37%, and rice declined 2.37%.
Meat went the other way, up 1.54%, a reminder that disinflation is uneven and can reverse quickly. The“behind the story” is housing and administered costs.
Over the year, housing rose 6.69%, and residential electricity jumped 11.95%, keeping pressure on families even when some foods get cheaper. Markets now debate when easing begins in 2026-many leaning toward March rather than January.
The central bank's dilemma is simple: cut too early and credibility evaporates; wait too long and growth and credit suffer. The next checkpoint is the full December IPCA release on January 9, 2026.
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