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  Home arrow Back Issues arrow 2004 arrow September 2005 arrow Finance Minister Sees Long Cycle of Growth for Brazil Saturday, 28 November 2009 
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Finance Minister Sees Long Cycle of Growth for Brazil PDF Print E-mail
Written by Beatrice Denis   
Monday, 26 September 2005

Latin American ended mixed. While traders booked profits in Brazil, strength in the U.S. helped lift Mexico. Argentina ended little changed, as traders are monitoring any key development on the IMF front.

Brazil's benchmark Bovespa Index fell 152.91 points, or 0.49%, while Mexico's benchmark Bolsa Index climbed 116.20 points, or 0.74%. Argentina's Merval Index added 1.35 points, or 0.08%.

Brazilian shares eased back on profit-taking, following robust gains in recent weeks. On the economic front, Finance Minister Antonio Palocci found that the economy is "sound, solid and strong... It is not a bout of growth, but the beginning of a long cycle of growth."

Central bank Governor Henrique Meirelles added that, "we see a very clear pattern of trending down in real interest rates... we as the central bank are aiming at keeping that pattern."

In today's data, a weekly survey of analysts forecast gross domestic product growth of 3.28% for 2005, up from a prior forecast of 3.26%, while predictions for inflation remained unchanged, at 5.21%.

Separately, the primary budget surplus in August totaled 10.19 billion reais, up from 8.8 billion reais in July, and above expectations ranging from 7.0 billion to 9.5 billion reais.

On the corporate front, Citigroup denied that it had reached an agreement with Telecom Italia for the sale of Citigroup's interest in Brasil Telecom, contrary to rumors last week.

Also of note, miner CVRD was active after proposing an additional dividend payment of US$ 300 million. The proposal was lower than the anticipated US$ 900 million, a disappointment apparently due to the firm's bid for Canada's Canico Resources.

Still in commodities news, Petrobras and Venezuela's Petroleos de Venezuela are close to signing a deal for a heavy crude refinery in Brazil's Northeast, reported news services.

Mexican issues, meanwhile, gained ground, in tandem with U.S. counterparts. Relief that hurricane Rita did not cause more damage, as well as strong housing data, lifted that market. U.S. existing home sales in August jumped 2.0% to 7.29 million from 7.15 million the prior month. A decline to 7.10 million had been anticipated.

Closer to home, Finance Minister Diaz predicted that the economy will likely recover in the second half of the year, while Bank of Mexico Governor Ortiz warned that inflation would not likely keep declining steadily through year's end. Separately, July economic activity climbed 2% from a year ago, or 1.82% from June, versus the 1.34% decline from May to June.

In research, an investment bank started construction company ICA at "buy" with a price target of US$ 2.80, saying the firm's earnings outlook for 2005 and 2006 remained attractive.

Argentine stocks advanced, amid little corporate developments, and with analysts keeping a close watch on ongoing discussions between the government and the IMF. In a statement to the IMF over the weekend, the government declared it sought a new financial program with the international body and a strategy for dealing with holdouts from its debt restructuring.

However, Argentina ignored IMF calls to lift its 2006 primary surplus target of 3% of GDP, adding that it does not plan to change its policy of buying U.S. dollars to keep the peso weaker.

Thomson Financial Corporate Group - www.thomsonfinancial.com

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