Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil's Focus Report Opens 2026 With Inflation Near The Ceiling, Rates Still Heavy


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Markets see 2026 inflation at 4.06%, still inside Brazil's target band but close to the top.
  • The same survey implies expensive credit will linger, even if the Selic falls from 15% to 12.25%.
  • Debt, deficits, and a large current-account gap help explain why expectations remain sticky.

Brazil's first Focus Report of 2026 delivers a message of uneasy stability: inflation expectations are not exploding, but they are not returning to the comfort zone either.

The Central Bank 's weekly survey of economists shows the median forecast for 2026 IPCA inflation ticking up to 4.06%, from 4.05% the previous week, ending an eight-week sequence of declines.

Four weeks earlier, the same forecast stood at 4.16%, a reminder that the direction had been improving before the latest nudge. The number is politically loaded because Brazil's inflation target is 3.0%, with a tolerance band of ±1.5 percentage points.



That means anything above 4.5% risks forcing an uncomfortable public explanation from the Central Bank. A 4.06% forecast stays inside the band, but it hugs the upper edge closely enough to keep the debate over monetary discipline alive.
Brazil sees rate cuts ahead but risks persist
The broader Focus package reinforces that tension. Forecasters still expect the Selic-which ended 2025 at 15.0%, the highest level since mid-2006-to fall to 12.25% by end-2026, then to 10.50% in 2027 and 9.75% in 2028.

Growth, however, is not expected to surge: the median projection for GDP remains 1.8% for 2026 and 1.8% for 2027, rising to 2.0% in 2028. The exchange-rate path is equally restrained, with the dollar seen at R$5.50 ($1) at end-2026 and end-2027, and R$5.52 ($1) in 2028.

Digging into the same tables explains why the market is cautious. The Focus median still puts 2025 IPCA at 4.31% and administered prices at 5.31% for 2025, easing to 3.73% in 2026.

It also projects a -$75.0 billion current-account deficit in 2025, improving to -$67.0 billion in 2026, even as the trade surplus stays strong at $63.0 billion in 2025 and $66.0 billion in 2026.

Net public debt is seen rising from about 66.0% of GDP in 2025 to 70.2% in 2026, with a primary deficit near -0.50% of GDP in 2025 and -0.55% in 2026.

In plain terms: Brazil may be moving away from the inflation cliff, but markets still see enough fiscal and external pressure to keep money expensive-and patience limited.

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The Rio Times

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