Brazil Stock Market in Free Fall While Real Sinks to Lowest Level Since January

Brazilian currency, the real The Brazilian stock exchange index, Bovespa, fell 4.5% on Tuesday, September 9, hitting the lowest level in a year as prices for top commodity exports slumped and Brazil's Finance minister, Guido Mantega, predicted the currency will extend its steepest monthly decline since 2002.

As sugar, oil and metals plunged, related industries shares in the stock market tumbled, the real sank 2.3% to its lowest level since January. Petrobras (oil) and Vale do Rio Doce (iron & metals) concentrate 30% of the Bovespa index.

This means that the Bovespa index fell below the benchmark of 50.000 and later 49.000 points (48.435) accumulating losses of 6.74% in a week, 14.4% in the month and 24.18% since the beginning of the year.

The historic maximum was 73.438 points last May 20. Last year the São Paulo stock exchange soared 43.65%.

Finance Minister Mantega said the Brazilian currency will keep weakening as falling commodities narrow the country's trade surplus and reduce investment. The Brazilian real, which climbed 17% last year, has weakened 8.2% this month and closed Tuesday at 1.7777 against the US dollar.

"We've reached the limit of the real's appreciation," Mantega said during an event in Brazilian capital Brasí­lia. "And in a way it's good because it won't hinder our exports." He added that the real decline "won't stoke inflation because energy and commodity prices are falling".

The Central Bank increased the benchmark interest rate in the past three meetings to 13% from a record low of 11.25% in April in a bid to fight inflation at the highest level since 2005.

Brazil's current account deficit widened to 19.5 billion US dollars in the 12 months to June, the biggest gap in six years as companies stepped up profit remittances and increased imports, pointed out the Central bank.

Mantega also admitted that global turbulence in financial markets is limiting investment flows into Brazil.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Fears Many Soybean Growers Will Be Ruined

A study by the Applied Economic Research Institute (Ipea) shows that the amount of ...

Brazil’s Vote Buying Probe Hears Main Actors

Brazil’s Parliamentary Investigative Commission (CPI), which is investigating a supposed payoff scheme in Congress, ...

Brazil’s African Small Business Effort Bearing Fruit

One year after introduction of the Empreender program in African countries, the project is ...

TAP Brings Half a Billion Dollars to Save Brazil’s Ailing Varig Airlines

Fernando Pinto, president of the Portuguese airline, TAP, reiterated Tuesday, November 8, his company’s ...

Today’s Election in Brazil May Put Two Women in Competition for Presidency

In Brazil, where voting is mandatory, close to 130 million Brazilians are going this ...

Not So Clean

"Part of our job is trying to educate people in Brazil about the enormous ...

Minister Promises Brazil Will Soon Become a Big Fish Exporter

Brazilian Minister of the Special Secretariat for Aquaculture and Fisheries, Altemir Gregolin, considered the ...

The Economy of Chaos

For long considered a patrimony of Brazilian music, Francisco Buarque de Hollanda, better known ...

Brazilian Equities Go Down on Rate Hike Fears

Latin American stocks dropped, alongside lackluster trading in U.S. equities following two days of ...

Life’s a Beach

Postcards from Rio By John Miller Postcards from Rio TV News I have been ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`