Brazil Roller Coaster: Stocks 10% Down, Dollar 7% Up

Brazil's Bovespa Dragged down by the bearish behavior of international markets and fears of a global recession, the Brazilian stock market tumbled over 10% this Wednesday, October 22. Losses intensified at the end of the trading session reflecting the losses of the Dow Jones in Wall Street.

For the sixth time in the last three weeks, the Bovespa, São Paulo's Stock Exchange, stopped operation for half an hour, after the automatic circuit breaker was activated, something that happens when the Ibovespa, Bovespa's  index, declines by 10%.

One of the reasons for the pessimistic scenario was a statement by the British premier. Gordon Brown, admitting that the United Kingdom wouldn't be spared the recession.
 
Bovespa's bad day was due in part to  shares tied to commodities and banks. Oil multinational Petrobras' stocks, for example, dropped 9.59%, while mining company Vale saw its shares plummeting 7.8%.

Bad news didn't come only from overseas, however. The publication in the federal newspaper Daily Gazette (Diário Oficial) of temporary measure 443 led the market to fear interference of the state in the banking system.

The presidential measure opens the doors for the Banco do Brasil and Caixa Econômica Federal, two state-owned financial institutions, to buy directly or through their subsidiaries, banks headquartered in Brazil. This would allow the government to take over banks in financial trouble.

Brazilian Finance minister, Guido Mantega, made it clear that people shouldn't read too much into the new temporary measure, denying that any bank in Brazil is on the verge of collapse. In his press conference, Mantega tried to calm the market. "There is no bank breaking in this country," he said.

Despite the minister's assurances, however, Banco do Brasil's shares lost 15.4%, falling to 13.88 reais, while another bank, Unibanco, saw its stocks declining 13.7% to 12.72 reais. Two companies from the building sector also stumbled badly: Gafisa dropped 17,2%, to 15.12 reais and Cyrela slipped 16.1%, to 10.40 reais.

At the end of the day, on Wednesday, the Ibovespa had fallen a healthy 10.18% to sobering 35,069 points, the lowest in over two years. With yesterday's  collapse, the Brazilian market has now declined over 45% since the beginning of 2008. The Ibovespa had finished 2007 at 63,886 points.

Meanwhile the dollar started to zoom up again.  Ignoring measures from the Brazilian Central Bank to contain the greenback, the American currency went up 6.67%, closing at 2.38 reais.

Early afternoon, the Central bank sold US$ 216.1 million in swap exchange contracts with periodic adjustment. Another US$ 299.5 million were sold later in the day.

According to the Central Bank president, Henrique Meirelles, Brazil has already used US$ 22.8 billion to contain the dollar since the aggravation of the recent crisis in mid September when the American bank Lehman Brothers folded.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Olympic Shames

Supreme humiliation: the Cameroon soccer team playing with only nine players against Brazil’s 11, ...

Succession Has Started in Brazil

Lula says he is against reelection. He has positioned himself against this monstrosity stuffed ...

This land is their land

U.S. international policy is rife with "America knows best" practices and policies. So, to ...

South Africa One of the Stops on Brazil Lula’s Fifth Trip to Africa

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva will begin Tuesday, February 6, his fifth ...

Panicky Markets: US, Clean Your Own Mess, Warns Brazilian President

At at time when stock exchanges and financial systems all over the world react ...

Toil for Tots

Low wages and unemployment are mainstream concerns in Brazilian society but their most painful ...

While Brazil Burns Lula’s Popularity Rises

Brazilian public opinion remains strongly behind President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in spite ...

Will Brazil Wait for Another Tragedy Before Dealing with Killer Floods?

As tens of thousands of Rio de Janeiro based families in the Serrana region ...

US Real-Estate Crisis Puts Big Dent on Brazil’s Wood Industry

Sales by the industry of Santa Catarina state in southern Brazil have accumulated a ...

September 1994

CONTENTS: Cover story: Picking up the president (p. 8) A whale of an election ...