Brazil’s Surplus Down Sharply Due to Declining Trade

Brazilian market kept retreating this Friday, May 19, amid continued concerns about rising global inflation and uncertainty over when the U.S. Federal Reserve will end its tightening cycle.

Brazil’s Bovespa Index dropped 74.29 points, or 0.20%. Mexico’s benchmark Bolsa Index fell 34.88 points, or 0.17%, while Argentina’s Merval Index inched up 1.49 points, or 0.09%.

Brazilian stocks dipped, extending recent losses, on continued concerns about U.S. inflation and interest rates following yesterday’s data showing a bigger-than-expected rise in U.S. consumer prices in April.

Investors fear that recent signs of inflationary pressure will lead the U.S. Federal Reserve to continue its tightening cycle longer than expected, potentially diverting investment flows away from emerging markets like Brazil.

In local economic news, Brazil posted a current account surplus in April of US$ 241 million, down sharply from US$ 1.35 billion in March, due in part to a declining trade surplus and significant overseas corporate profit remittances.

On the corporate front, steelmaker Arcelor Brasil was in focus after Mittal Steel raised its offer for Arcelor Brasil parent Arcelor by 34% and increased the cash element of the bid as well.

Meanwhile, brewing giant Companhia de Bebidas das Americas (AmBev) posted a first-quarter net profit that more than quadrupled to 655.9 million reais from a year earlier amid higher revenue.

Elsewhere, Mexican shares slumped, as investors continued to fret over the outlook for U.S. inflation and interest rates. In corporate news, the A shares of retailer Grupo Famsa SA debuted on the Mexican Stock Exchange today.

The shares rose 1.9% to 26.50 pesos after the initial public offering priced earlier in the day at 26.00 pesos. Some 2.56 billion pesos worth of shares were sold through the IPO and secondary offering. Famsa expects to receive about 1.51 billion pesos in net proceeds from its initial listing.

Argentine issues were little changed amid a dearth of local market news.

Thomson Financial www.thomsonfinancial.com

Tags:

You May Also Like

Who Sabotaged the Brazilian Rocket?

Brazilian authorities say they are not dismissing the possibility that the accident that killed ...

Brazilian supermarket gets creative with Brazil's flag

Lower Inflation and Interests Bring 7% Higher Sales to Brazil’s Supermarkets

Brazilian supermarket sales grew 7% in the first quarter of this year when compared ...

Relatives of Boeing Crashed in Brazil Sue American Firm ExcelAire

ExcelAire, the Long Island-based company that owns the Legacy jet that collided on September ...

Canada Firm Bets on Brazilian Diamonds

Canada-based Braz Diamond Mining Inc. now controls Brazil’s largest known diamondiferous kimberlite. The company ...

How I Taught English in Brazil And Survived to Tell the Story: Lesson 2

More often than not, the sharp-eyed professor is forced to improvise a tailor-made solution ...

Brazil: Fun Around the Fire

Festas juninas were brought to Brazil by Portuguese and Spanish settlers celebrating the harvest ...

From Now On, Concession Is Out, Sharing Is In for Brazil Oil

Brazil’s new rules for exploration and production of oil in the subsalt layer maintain ...

Brazil and Mexico Talk of Distrust and Plans of Free Trade

Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Felipe Calderon from Mexico called for ...

The Land of the Sphinx Is Luring Brazilian Soccer Players

Rogério Dantas, a 23-year-old native of the southeastern Brazilian state of São Paulo, arrived ...

UN’s Atomic Energy Agency Singles Out Brazil as Example of Cooperation

The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Mohamed El Baradei, praised Brazil's nuclear ...