Brazil Spends Record $8 Billion to Stem Market Rout Lula Sparked

(Bloomberg) -- As the currency craters in Brazil, thrusting the country’s markets into the international spotlight for the first time in years, a grim reality is setting in for top economic aides to President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. They are, they fear, powerless to do much to stop the panic.

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Lula, convalescing at his home in Sao Paulo after back-to-back emergency brain surgeries, has no interest in adding to an austerity package that could, if executed boldly enough, calm investors’ worries about soaring debt and stem the capital flight that has sent the currency to record lows.

His advisers had to plead with him for weeks to do it in the first place. And lawmakers, they note, are opposed to it, too. The tweaks they’re making to the bill as it wends its way through Congress are aimed at weakening the package of cost cuts.

It’d been years, dating all the way back to the run-up to Lula’s very first election in 2002, since Brazilian markets were convulsed by fears of a debt crisis. And while this one may still pale in comparison to that one — the country’s foreign bonds yield a fraction of what they did back then, and there’s a lot less dollar debt outstanding now — in its essence, that’s what it is. Just like in France, investors are no longer in the mood to finance deficits that exploded during the pandemic and barely inched back lower in the years since.

Intervention

The central bank has ramped up intervention in currency markets to try to stem the losses amid what Governor Roberto Campos Neto called an “atypical” outflow. It has stepped in either directly or through swaps almost every day for the past week, spending close to $14 billion to give some support to the real, the worst performing major currency in the world this year.

On Thursday alone it sold $8 billion in back-to-back spot auctions — that’s the biggest daily sale of dollars since at least 1999, when Brazil adopted a floating exchange rate regime, according to central bank data compiled by Bloomberg.

The real jumped more than 2% on Thursday after the sales. But on most days, the impact of the central bank stepping in has largely faded within hours. Swap rates have barely reacted, pricing in more and more rate hikes ahead.

That’s because regardless of how many dollars the central bank sells or how fast it pushes up interest rates, offering ever-juicier returns on local assets, investors will just keep pulling money out until they’re confident the deficit will be brought down. There will be starts and stops in the outflows, analysts say, but the concerns are too real to paper over with 15% bond yields.