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Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Brazil Industrial Output February 2008

Brazil's industrial output climbed the most in four months in February, increasing expectations policy makers may raise interest rates to rein in the economy's expansion as inflation remains above the central bank target. Output climbed 9.7 percent in February from February 2007, the government said today. It was the 20th straight gain in year-on year industrial production. The annual rate of increase for 2007 was 6 percent, twice the pace of 2006, this was the fastest rate since 2004, when output grew by 8.3 percent.



Cheaper credit and record low unemployment rates have bolstered domestic demand and industrial production. The February gain was more than the revised 8.7 percent increase in January. Driving overall production up in February was the output of capital goods, which rose 25 percent from the year ago month, the agency said. Production of durable goods, such as cars, jumped 20.7 percent.

Brazil's trade surplus also widened to $1.01 billion in March from $882 million the previous month, the Trade Ministry said in a separate announcement. However it is far from clear how this position will evolve moving forward, and Brazil's trade surplus is expected to narrow to $27 billion this year from $40 billion in 2007, according to the most recent central bank forecast. The smaller surplus may lead Brazil to have a current account deficit in the region of $12 billion this year compared with a surplus $1.46 billion surplus in 2007, the bank said.

Coffee exports from Brazil, the world's biggest producer, also weakened last month, falling 5.4 percent in March from February, according to Brazil's Coffee Exporters Council. Brazil shipped 1.72 million bags of coffee beans last month, compared with 1.82 million bags a month earlier.


On the other hand Brazilian inflation accelerated in annual terms in February - although it slowed slightly in monthly terms when compared with January. Consumer prices, as measured by the benchmark IPCA index, rose 0.49 percent in February, compared with a 0.54 percent increase in January, the national statistics agency said last month. The annual inflation rate in February remained above the central bank's 4.5 percent target for a second straight month. Inflation quickened to 4.61 percent in the 12 months through February from 4.56 percent in the previous period.



The central bank said in the minutes of its March 4-5 meeting it considered raising the benchmark interest rate to hold demand, as inflation remained above the 4.5 percent annual consumer prices target. Policy makers, led by central bank President Henrique Meirelles, target annual inflation of 4.5 percent, plus or minus 2 percentage points to accommodate unexpected price shocks.

At the bank's March 4-5 meeting, the board considered raising rates for the first time since October, when they snapped the longest monetary easing cycle since the adoption of inflation targets in 1999. The board voted unanimously to keep the rate unchanged at 11.25 percent for the fourth straight meeting. On March 27, policy makers in their quarterly report increased their forecast for 2008 inflation to 4.6 percent from a previous 4.3 percent.

Friday, March 28, 2008

Brazil's Central Bank Raises Inflation Forecast

Brazil's central bank sees 2008 inflation rising above its annual target of 4.5 percent, increasing speculation the monetary policy board may raise interest rates in the months ahead in an attempt to contain prices. Policy makers increased their inflation forecast for this year to 4.6 percent from 4.3 percent today. The bank also increased this year's growth forecast to 4.8 percent from 4.5 percent.

The bank's policy makers this month considered raising interest rates to stem inflation for the first time since ending two years of cuts in October, the minutes of their March 4-5 meeting showed, but they chose to keep the rate unchanged at a record-low 11.25 percent.

The yield on the overnight interest-rate futures contract for January delivery rose 2.5 basis points, or 0.025 percentage point, to 12.260 percent at 10:56 a.m. New York time That's more than 1 percentage point above the bank's target overnight rate of 11.25 percent, signaling investors are betting that policy makers will boost the rate this year. The yield on the January contract has risen 50 basis points this month.


Brazil's annual inflation rate, as measured by the benchmark IPCA index, climbed to 4.61 percent in February from an eight-year record low of 2.96 percent in March 2007.

The central bank targets inflation of 4.5 percent, plus or minus 2 percentage points to accommodate price shocks.

Separately, the national statistics agency said today that unemployment had risen to 8.7 percent in February, from 8 percent in January. The jobless rate was down from the 9.9 percent registered in January 2007.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Brazil Retail Sales January 2008

Brazil's retail sales rose 11.8 percent in January from January 2007, the national statistics agency said. Retail, supermarket and grocery store sales, as measured by units sold, rose more than the revised 9.5 percent increase in December, the national statistic agency said today.


Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Brazil Consumer Inflation February 2008

Brazilian inflation slowed in February for a second straight month, reducing the likelihood that the central bank won't be raising rates in the immediate future. Brazil's consumer prices rose 0.49 percent in February from January, the national statistic agency said today. Inflation, as measured by the benchmark IPCA index, decelerated from 0.54 percent month on month rate in January. The annual inflation rate in February remained above the central bank's 4.5 percent target for a second consecutive month, and the year on year rate was up to 4.61 percent in the 12 months up to February from 4.56 percent between January 2007 and January 2008.



The central bank ended its longest cycle of monetary easing last October after a surge in food prices coupled with rising consumer demand raised the chances inflation could accelerate above the 4.5 percent annual target. Policy makers voted last week to hold rates at a record low 11.25 percent for a fourth straight meeting.


Education prices, fueled by seasonal tuition increases, jumped 3.47 percent in February, accounting for almost half of the gain in the IPCA index last month.

Food and beverages inflation, largely responsible for putting the annual rate over target this year, slowed to 0.60 percent in February from 1.52 percent in January.

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Brazil's Central Bank Holds Interest Rates

Brazil's central bank kept the overnight rate unchanged for a fourth straight meeting as slowing inflation bolstered confidence the bank's annual target will be met. Policy makers, led by bank President Henrique Meirelles, held the benchmark interest rate at a record low 11.25 percent. Monthly inflation, measured by the benchmark IPCA index, slowed in January to 0.54 percent from 0.74 percent a month earlier.

The central bank brought Brazil's longest cycle of monetary easing since at least 1999 to a halt last October after higher food prices coupled with the fastest economic expansion in more than three years raised concern that inflation could overshoot policy makers' 4.5 inflation target.

Annual inflation in Brazil has been steadily increasing from an eight- year low of 2.96 percent last March to 4.74 percent through mid-February. Since January, the 12-month inflation rate has persistently exceeded the mid-point of the central bank's target of 4.5 percent plus or minus 2 percentage points.

Meat and milk prices were the main driver of inflation in the second half of last year. Food prices in 2007 jumped 10.8 percent, the most in five years, fueled by rising worldwide consumer demand for commodities. Monthly food price inflation decelerated to 1.52 percent in January from a five-year high of 2.06 percent in December.

The yield on the inter-bank deposit contract for Jan. 2, 2009, which reveals trader's future interest rate bets, fell to 11.69 percent from 12.07 percent on Dec. 28. Record-low interest rates coupled with record bank lending has stoked a surge in demand for consumer goods such as home appliances and cars in what is Latin America's biggest economy.

Retail sales were up by 9.6 percent in 2007, the biggest gain since the national statistic agency started the current series in 2001, while industrial output rose less than expected in January, increasing by 8.5 percent from January 2007.