Brazil hikes interest rate
Friday, 5 August 2022
BRASÍLIA, Aug 04 (AFP): Brazil's central bank raised its benchmark interest rate for the 12th straight time Wednesday, citing an "adverse and volatile" global economy, and indicated its tightening cycle, one of the world's most aggressive, may not be over.
The bank's monetary policy committee raised the benchmark Selic rate by half a per centage point, to 13.75 per cent, in line with market expectations.
And though many analysts had forecast Brazil's hawkish rate hikes would stop there, the bank said stubbornly high inflation meant more could be in store.
"The committee will evaluate the need for a residual adjustment of lesser magnitude at its next meeting" from September 20 to 21, it said in a statement.
"The external environment remains adverse and volatile, with larger downward revisions of the global economic growth outlook in an inflationary environment that is still under pressure," it added.
"The uncertainty of the current economic situation, both domestic and global... demands extra caution."
The decision was unanimous by the committee's nine members, it said.
The key interest rate now stands at its highest level since January 2017.
Haunted by a history of hyperinflation, Brazil-Latin America's biggest economy-reacted fast and aggressively to the global price surges unleashed by the coronavirus pandemic and then Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Since March 2021, the central bank has rapidly raised the Selic from an all-time low of two per cent, which it had introduced to stimulate the pandemic-battered economy.
That included three whopping hikes of 1.5 per centage points from October 2021 to February 2022, followed by two one-per centage-point increases.
Now, Brazil is weighing when to bring its hawkish cycle to an end, just as policy makers in other major economies shift their monetary tightening into high gear.
The US Federal Reserve hiked its benchmark rate by 0.75 point last week, the fourth straight increase. The week before, the European Central Bank raised its key rate by 0.5 point, the first increase since 2011.
Annual inflation remains high in Brazil, at 11.89 per cent in June-way above the central bank's target of 3.5 per cent.
But analysts polled by the central bank forecast the inflation rate will fall to 7.15 per cent by the end of the year.
The same poll found analysts expect the central bank's tightening cycle is nearly over: they gave an average forecast of 13.75 per cent for the Selic rate at year's end.
Even as the bank's policy makers try to slow runaway prices by hiking interest rates, they are wary of tipping the economy into a recession by slamming the brakes on too hard.
The central bank is facing calls to ease up on its rate increases.
"Since December, the real interest rate has been at a level that is inhibiting economic activity," the chief economic analyst at Brazil's powerful National Confederation of Industry (CNI), Marcelo Azevedo, said in a recent statement.
The CNI called Wednesday's hike "wrong."
A 0.4-per cent month-on-month fall in Brazilian industrial production in June and other "softer surveys" last month indicate the economy is losing steam, said William Jackson, chief emerging markets economist at consulting firm Capital Economics.
Analysts polled by the central bank forecast Brazil's GDP growth will come in at 1.97 per cent for the year, after an expansion of 4.6 per cent last year and a contraction of 3.9 per cent in pandemic-stricken 2020.