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Brazil's 2.9% Growth Is the Worst in South America PDF Print E-mail
Written by Newsroom   
Thursday, 01 March 2007

Real, the Brazilian currency Brazil's economy expanded 2.9% last year compared to 2.35% in 2005 according to the latest official release on Wednesday. In the fourth quarter GDP increased 1.1% over the third quarter and 3.8% over the same period in 2005, reported the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics.

The percentage is higher that the 2.7% anticipated by a panel of experts from the private sector but still is the smallest growth in South America. Brazil's economy has been growing less than the Latinamerica average (5%) and way below similar emerging economies in Asia.

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has promised an average annual growth of 5% for his second four year mandate.

In related news, the Brazilian Central Bank reported that international reserves reached a historic record of over 100 billion US dollars for the first time ever. Based on the international liquidity concept reserves totaled 99.7 billion US dollars Monday.

International reserves have been increasing for months following the Central Bank's policy of purchasing US dollars in the domestic market in an attempt to contain the appreciation of the local currency real, which is now in the range of 2.1 reais to the greenback.

When Lula first took office in 2002 the exchange rate was almost 4 to 1. Brazilian exporters are groaning that the "overvalued" real is increasing costs in US dollars and cutting into profits.

Last week, the US dollar in the Brazilian market dropped to 2.08 reais, its lowest level since May 2006, but following strong US dollars purchases by the Central Bank the exchange rose to 2.12 Reais.

The Central Bank last January intervened in money markets absorbing US$ 4.8 Billion and is estimated to end the year's first two months with US$ 9 billion. At the end of January, international reserves stood at US$ 91 billion, compared to 85.8 billion in December 2006.

Reserves have been increasing to historic levels in Brazil since last September when for the first time since 1998 they reached US$ 74 billion. However at the time the bank decided to let the real float and this was followed by an abrupt hemorrhage of reserves in coincidence with the Asian and Russian financial crisis.

Central Bank president Henrique Meirelles said that in spite of the latest international turbulences the bank will continue to buy US dollars in local markets. "We have a reserves accumulation policy which was decided January 2004, and that policy has been steered with great success".

Mercopress

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where are the junkies from this forum ?????
written by ch.c., March 01, 2007
Swallowing the reality you knew from day 1 ????????
Telling the sad truth doesnt make anyone arrogant !!!!!!


Laugh.....laugh....laugh !!!!!!

And your idiots Brazilian exporters groaning of your overvalued currency now because it was almost 4 to 1 US$ in 2002, have on purpose a hole in place of their memory.
They forgot that the Real was at 1 US$ until early 1998....before collapsing by 75 % until 2002.....recovered somewhat by now, BUT is still 50 % below its 1995-early 1998 exchange rate.

Quite easy to become more competitive when you had cut your currency value by a factor of 4 from 1998 to 2002 !!!!!! Where would go your exports if your currency would simply go back to what it was a decade ago, namely to 1 US$/1 Reais !!!!!

Unemployment at 25 % and Lula crying it is not his fault ??????

To make you somewhat afraid, last week, Merrill Lynch, for whatever it is worth, predicted that the Brazilian would still go up by another 20 % to 1,54 Reais per US$ !!!!

Time will tell !!!!!


Laugh...laugh...laugh !
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written by conceicao, March 02, 2007
What does the dollar peg from before the default by Argentina have to do with what is going on today? The real is floating and has been strengthening over an extended period. And exporters
are always going to complain about a strengthening currency wherever they are from. I think Meirelles is doing a good job and certainly think that Brasil's economic prospects are stronger than
Argentina's no matter what Commandante Kirchner and his cronies are doing to pump the economy in the short term. As for Merrill Lynch, they are the lead underwriter of the Gafisa IPO so
sure they are going to talk up the real to their target audience of investors. And, Gafisa is a big deal and a big story. If Brasil can start tapping the capital markets for funds to construct housing in
Brasil and domestic rates continue to drop, you have the start of a virtuous circle that could finally start to underpin solid, sustainable GDP growth in Brasil.
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