Brazil · Markets
Key Facts
—Inflation up: The market’s 2026 inflation forecast rose to 5.04 percent from 4.92 percent, an 11th straight weekly increase.
—Above target: The forecast sits above the 4.5 percent ceiling of the central bank’s inflation target band.
—Selic steady: The year-end 2026 policy-rate forecast held at 13.25 percent, after two cuts took it to 14.5 percent.
—Other views: The 2026 growth estimate edged up to 1.89 percent and the year-end dollar forecast eased to 5.17 reais ($1.03).
—Latin American impact: Sticky inflation in the region’s largest economy points to higher-for-longer rates across markets.
Brazil’s market raised its 2026 inflation forecast to 5.04 percent in the May 25 central-bank survey, the eleventh straight weekly increase and a reading that keeps expectations above the official target ceiling.
What did the inflation forecast survey show?
The weekly Focus survey of economists lifted the median 2026 consumer-price estimate to 5.04 percent from 4.92 percent, the eleventh consecutive rise. That keeps the projection above the 4.5 percent upper bound of the target, whose center is 3 percent with a 1.5-point tolerance, signaling expectations remain unanchored despite firmer central-bank messaging.
Analysts linked the renewed pressure mainly to recent oil-price shocks tied to conflict in the Middle East. The 2027 estimate edged up to 4.01 percent, while 2028 held at 3.65 percent.
What does it mean for interest rates?
The median forecast for the Selic policy rate at the end of 2026 held at 13.25 percent, after the central bank delivered two quarter-point cuts this year that lowered it from 15 percent to 14.5 percent. Persistent above-target inflation tends to support higher rates for longer, which weighs on credit-sensitive sectors even as a slightly better growth outlook helps consumption and services.
Economists nudged the 2026 growth estimate up to 1.89 percent and trimmed the year-end dollar forecast to 5.17 reais ($1.03 per real equivalent), a firmer currency that can ease pressure on imported goods. The mix leaves the central bank weighing how far and how fast it can extend its easing cycle.
Live Market IntelligenceBrazil — Live Market Board
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Brazil — Live Market Board
+0.73%
177,488
+0.73%
68,231
-0.15%
10,823
+2.45%
2,846,220
-1.08%
2,118
-0.22%
19,767
+0.37%
| Instrument | Last | Change | YoY | Prev. | High | Low | Volume |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IBOV | 177,488 | +0.73% | +28.49% | 176,210 | 177,736 | 176,210 | — |
| USD/BRL | 5.02 | -0.37% | -11.09% | 5.04 | 5.04 | 4.99 | — |
| SELIC | 14.50% | — | — | — | — | — | |
| PETR4 | 43.00 | -3.33% | +37.38% | 44.48 | 43.82 | 43.00 | 21,424,800 |
| VALE3 | 83.10 | +0.00% | +53.88% | 83.10 | 83.33 | 82.45 | 5,683,200 |
| ITUB4 | 40.35 | +2.33% | +9.89% | 39.43 | 40.49 | 39.86 | 8,337,100 |
| BBDC4 | 18.04 | +2.38% | +14.69% | 17.62 | 18.07 | 17.74 | 9,690,500 |
| BBAS3 | 21.64 | +3.34% | -12.24% | 20.94 | 21.67 | 21.13 | 13,093,800 |
| B3SA3 | 17.38 | +4.32% | +21.21% | 16.66 | 17.43 | 16.78 | 13,452,700 |
| ABEV3 | 16.36 | +1.61% | +14.73% | 16.10 | 16.41 | 16.16 | 10,993,100 |
| WEGE3 | 43.34 | +1.43% | -0.85% | 42.73 | 43.52 | 43.00 | 1,887,000 |
| PRIO3 | 64.46 | -5.76% | +65.07% | 68.40 | 67.25 | 64.00 | 6,133,500 |
| SUZB3 | 41.52 | -0.43% | -21.32% | 41.70 | 42.10 | 41.38 | 2,090,900 |
| RENT3 | 45.05 | +3.92% | +10.28% | 43.35 | 45.12 | 43.88 | 4,279,400 |
| AZZA3 | 21.05 | +1.59% | -46.84% | 20.72 | 21.10 | 20.37 | 1,243,700 |
| CSNA3 | 6.74 | +0.15% | -23.61% | 6.73 | 6.83 | 6.60 | 5,342,300 |
| GGBR4 | 23.99 | -0.08% | +53.45% | 24.01 | 24.23 | 23.78 | 1,920,000 |
| ENEV3 | 25.19 | +0.92% | +78.42% | 24.96 | 25.37 | 24.93 | 2,265,900 |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Focus survey?
It is a weekly poll of market economists run by Brazil’s central bank, tracking expectations for inflation, interest rates, growth and the exchange rate. Markets watch it closely as a gauge of sentiment.
Why does the inflation forecast matter?
At 5.04 percent, the 2026 projection sits above the 4.5 percent target ceiling. A forecast stuck above target can keep interest rates elevated and shape borrowing costs across the economy.
Where is the Selic rate headed?
The market sees the Selic ending 2026 at 13.25 percent. The central bank has cut twice this year to 14.5 percent but signaled the path depends on external and inflation conditions.
Connected Coverage
The rate backdrop frames the bank results covered in our reporting on first-quarter earnings, and the oil shock behind the inflation pressure traced in our coverage of the Hormuz oil story.