Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Focus Survey: Brazil Inflation Forecast Spikes To 4.1%


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

- Brazil's Focus survey raised the 2026 IPCA inflation forecast from 3.91% to 4.10%, the largest single-week jump in recent reports, though still within the 4.5% ceiling

- Year-end Selic expectations climbed from 12.13% to 12.25%, marking the second consecutive weekly increase, ahead of Wednesday's Copom decision where markets expect a 25-basis-point cut

- GDP growth projections edged up from 1.82% to 1.83%, while the dollar forecast eased from R$5.41 to R$5.40

Brazil's financial market analysts raised their forecasts for inflation, interest rates, and economic growth simultaneously in Monday's Focus survey, signaling that the Iran war's energy shock is beginning to filter into domestic expectations even as the central bank prepares to cut rates this week. The Brazil Focus report, published by the Banco Central do Brasil on March 16, showed the year-end IPCA inflation estimate jumping from 3.91% to 4.10% - the sharpest single-week increase in recent editions - while the Selic rate forecast climbed from 12.13% to 12.25%. The Rio Times, a Latin American financial news outlet, tracks Brazil financial news English and the monetary policy signals that drive Latin America's largest economy.

Brazil Focus Report: Inflation Expectations Surge

The 19-basis-point jump in the 2026 IPCA forecast - from 3.91% to 4.10% - represents a notable acceleration in inflation expectations that had been drifting upward for weeks at a more gradual pace. The new estimate still falls within the National Monetary Council's target framework: the 3% center with a 1.5 percentage point tolerance band means the target is met if inflation lands between 1.5% and 4.5%. Brazil's trailing 12-month IPCA stood at 3.81% through February, after a 0.70% monthly reading that came in slightly above market expectations.

The upward revision reflects multiple pressures. Brent crude prices have surged past $105 per barrel amid the Strait of Hormuz disruption, threatening to push fuel and transportation costs higher. Petrobras announced a R$0.38-per-liter increase in refinery diesel prices in response, and further adjustments to gasoline cannot be ruled out if oil prices remain elevated. Domestically, food inflation - particularly vegetables and meat - drove the January price acceleration, while services inflation remains sticky at levels above the central bank's comfort zone.

Selic Path and Copom Decision

The year-end Selic forecast rose for the second consecutive week to 12.25%, up from 12.13%. The benchmark rate has held at 15% since June 2025, and the Copom meets Tuesday and Wednesday with markets pricing a 25-basis-point cut that would bring the rate to 14.75%. If delivered, it would mark the first reduction in nine months and the third cut in the current easing cycle, which began with a 25-basis-point move in February.

The higher year-end Selic expectation suggests analysts believe the easing pace will slow relative to earlier projections, likely because oil-driven inflation limits the central bank's room to maneuver. For 2027, the consensus held steady at 10.50% for the 57th consecutive week, and for 2028 at 10.00% for the eighth straight week, indicating that markets see the terminal rate settling well above the pre-pandemic norm.

Growth and Currency Outlook

The GDP growth forecast in the Brazil Focus report ticked up marginally from 1.82% to 1.83% for 2026, a figure that sits well below the government's more optimistic 2.3% projection and the central bank's own 1.6% estimate. Brazil's economy grew 2.3% in 2025, but the combination of elevated interest rates, global uncertainty, and fiscal tightening is expected to produce a meaningful deceleration this year. Projections for 2027 held at 1.80%, with 2028 and 2029 both unchanged at 2.00%.

On the currency front, the dollar forecast eased from R$5.41 to R$5.40, continuing a gradual improvement from R$5.50 a month ago. For 2027, the estimate fell from R$5.50 to R$5.47. The real's relative stability has been supported by high carry-trade returns at 15% Selic, but analysts caution that any escalation in global risk aversion - particularly if the Hormuz crisis extends beyond the Pentagon's four-to-six-week estimate - could quickly reverse the currency's recent gains.

MENAFN17032026007421016031ID1110871473



The Rio Times

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Search