Brazil’s Producer Prices Plunge for 7th Month – Are We Heading for a Broader Slowdown?

Brazil’s Producer Prices Plunge for 7th Month – Are We Heading for a Broader Slowdown?

  • Industry prices down: Brazil’s producer‐price index (IPP) fell 0.20% in August 2025 (month-over-month), the seventh consecutive monthly decline. This follows a 0.31% drop in July, and contrasts with a +0.66% rise a year earlier. In year-on-year terms IPP is still up ~0.48%, but cumulative inflation in manufacturing is only +0.48% since Jan (and –3.6% year-to-date excluding high base in 2024).
  • Consumer inflation rebounds: Meanwhile consumer inflation (IPCA) accelerated to 0.48% in Sept 2025 from –0.11% in August [1]. This brought 12-month inflation to 5.17% (above the central bank’s 3% target) [2] [3]. The jump was driven by a 10.3% spike in electricity costs (after an Itaipu subsidy lapsed) and higher fuel prices [4]. Core prices remain elevated. IBGE’s Fernando Gonçalves notes that food prices fell again (–0.26% in Sept) due to ample supply, helping contain inflation [5].
  • Central bank holds rates: The Selic rate was kept at 15.0% (near a 20-year high) in late September. Policymakers have signaled a “very prolonged” pause [6]. ECB’s second-in-command Nilton David said the pause means interest rates will likely stay high longer to tame inflation [7]. In its policy report, the Central Bank projected 2026 inflation at ~3.6% (within the 3%±1.5 pp target band) and GDP growth at ~1.5% [8]. Finance Minister Haddad, by contrast, argued there is “no justification” for such high rates and said there is “room for interest rates to fall” [9].
  • Markets subdued: Brazil’s stock market is soft. The Ibovespa index closed around 141,700 points on Oct 9 (down ~0.3% on the week) [10]. The currency is stable at roughly BRL 5.38/USD [11]. Key stocks are under pressure: Petrobras ADR (PBR) trades near $11.96 [12] and Vale (VALE3) at about R$59.11 [13]. Global markets are cautious as investors await clearer inflation and fiscal signals.
  • Economists’ outlook: Most analysts now expect inflation to ease into the target range by early 2026. TS2 notes that Brazil’s central bank expects inflation to dip below the 4.5% upper bound by Q1 2026 [14]. Pantheon’s Andres Abadia agrees the recent slowdown in prices is largely base effects and “forward-looking indicators point to continued disinflation in the months ahead” [15]. Polls of economists see inflation ending 2025 around 5.0% and falling toward 4.4–4.9% in 2026, with a gradual recovery in growth.
  • Tech/space trends: Beyond these figures, Brazil is focusing on high-tech growth. Industry analyst TS2.tech highlights Brazil’s niche in the booming space sector – it hosts the Alcântara launch base and is developing domestic rockets [16]. TS2 also notes Brazil is drafting AI governance frameworks (alongside India) to regulate emerging tech [17]. Such investments in satellites, data and AI could boost productivity and exports in coming years.

Industrial Prices and Output

According to the IBGE agency, factory‐gate prices in Brazil’s industry continued to decline in August. Prices of manufactured and extractive goods fell 0.20% from July, led by lower prices for food products, chemicals and raw materials. Of 24 industrial sub-sectors, half saw price declines (some commodities like steel and minerals fell on global markets) while only machinery/electronics prices rose modestly. IBGE notes that sugar, soy and rice (harvest-driven) and chemicals pulled overall inflation down [18]. The drop was smaller than earlier in 2025 (April was –0.12%, May –0.26%), suggesting the disinflation trend may be easing. Nevertheless, this is the seventh straight month of decline in producer prices, wiping out nearly all post-pandemic inflation gains in industry.

Paradoxically, industrial output has begun to recover. IBGE’s monthly production index rose 0.8% in August (the biggest gain since March) [19], ending four months of stagnation. Manufacturing is now about 2.9% above its Feb 2020 pre-COVID level [20], though still well below its 2011 peak. The upturn was broad-based – 16 of 25 sectors expanded, including pharmaceuticals (+13.4% vs July), petroleum products and food. Output growth alongside falling prices could signal improving supply or weak demand. As IBGE’s André Macedo explains, a low base last year helped boost August’s gains [21]. In year-on-year terms, industrial production is marginally down (–0.7% vs Aug 2024) [22], reflecting lingering challenges like energy costs and modest investment.

Inflation and Monetary Policy

On the consumer side, inflation picked up in September. The IPCA index rose 0.48% [23], reversing August’s decline. The housing group surged 2.97% (0.45 pp of the total), driven by a 10.31% jump in residential electricity bills [24]. IBGE’s Fernando Gonçalves attributes the power spike to the end of the Itaipu dam subsidy and a still-active “red” tariff flag [25]. Transportation prices rose slightly on higher fuel costs, while food & beverage inflation slowed further (–0.26%) as supermarket prices fell for a fourth month. “The household food group continues to show negative variations, given the greater supply of products,” Gonçalves noted [26]. Core and services inflation remain above target.

With 12-month inflation at 5.17% [27] (above the 4.5% ceiling), Brazil’s central bankers are in a delicate spot. They held the Selic rate at 15.00% for a second meeting in September, the longest hold since late 2005. Monetary officials say the pause is deliberate – as IBGE’s Nilton David explains, “we are in the very prolonged period (of unchanged rates)” [28]. Likewise, President of the Central Bank Gabriel Galipolo recently emphasized that “unmistakable signs” of strength remain in the economy (booming labor market, current-account deficit) and that inflation is still far from target [29]. This helped justify keeping policy tight: the September minutes spoke of a “new stage” of steady rates, though they cautioned they would resume hiking if inflation diverged [30]. Finance Minister Fernando Haddad quickly responded that he sees “no justification” for such high rates and believed there is “room” to begin cutting borrowing costs [31] – highlighting a rare clash between the government and central bank.

Markets and Outlook

Financial markets have been relatively calm amid this backdrop. The Bovespa stock index opened Oct 10 around 141,700 points, roughly 0.3% below the prior week’s close [32]. Key Brazilian stocks are trading near their recent lows: Petrobras ADR (NYSE:PBR) is about $11.96 [33], and Vale S.A. (B3:VALE3) around R$59.11 [34]. The real held around BRL 5.38 per USD [35] (near its strongest in months), helped by global dollar weakness and local intervention in late 2024. Bond yields in Brazil (around 13.5% on 10-year notes) have edged up as fiscal and inflation concerns simmer, but remain below summer peaks. Globally, investors are watching U.S. Fed policy and China’s slowdown, which also impacts Brazil’s commodity exports.

Most analysts expect this deflationary trend in factory prices and easing food prices to gradually bring headline inflation down. A Reuters poll taken late Sept sees year-end IPCA around 5.0% (below earlier forecasts) and trending to the mid–4% range by end-2026. Indeed, TS2 reports Brazil’s central bank expects inflation to fall below 4.5% by the first quarter of 2026 [36]. Pantheon Macroeconomics’ chief Latin America economist Andres Abadia concurs: “the overall picture remains benign,” he says, and the September inflation rebound is largely base effects. Abadia expects “continued disinflation in the months ahead,” barring new shocks [37]. On growth, the central bank forecast in September was modest: GDP up ~2.0% in 2025 and ~1.5% in 2026 [38], reflecting the high interest rates. (For context, BBVA and others recently projected 2025 GDP ~2.2% and 2026 around 1.5–2.0%.)

Tech and Sector Highlights

Beyond these headline figures, Brazil is also making moves in technology and new industries. For example, TS2.tech’s Global Space Industry Report 2025 notes that Brazil has carved out a niche in the growing space economy. Brazil “posses o sítio de Alcântara e está desenvolvendo lançadores” – i.e. it hosts the Alcântara rocket-launch site and is developing its own launch vehicles [39]. This strategic asset could attract investment in satellites and services as the global space market may double by 2030. In artificial intelligence, TS2 highlights that “Brasil… está redactando marcos de IA” – Brazil and India are drafting new AI regulatory frameworks [40]. Policymakers aim to encourage innovation (in fintech, agritech, etc.) while managing AI risks. These initiatives, along with Brazil’s growing software and startup sector, could in time help lift productivity and growth.

Conclusions and Forecasts

In summary, Brazil’s short-term inflation outlook is turning cautiously positive: factory-gate prices have been falling, and consumer prices have paused or reversed recent spikes. This should alleviate pressure on households and help the central bank as it seeks inflation back to target. However, the economy is growing only modestly, and high borrowing costs risk dampening investment and jobs. Markets are banking on a ‘soft landing’ – for now. As Abadia puts it, disinflation looks set to continue [41]. But any renewed commodity shock or policy misstep could change the picture. Investors will be watching the next data releases (e.g. Sep IPP on Nov 7) and fiscal signals closely. In the medium term, structural trends – including Brazil’s push into high-tech and energy transition – will also shape the outlook. For now, analysts forecast inflation gradually easing towards the 4.5% ceiling by early 2026 [42], with rates held high until then.

Sources: Official IBGE releases [43] [44]; Reuters news and data (Oct 2025) [45] [46] [47] [48] [49]; Investing.com market data [50] [51] [52] [53]; industry forecasts and expert analysis [54] [55]. Tech sector insights from TS2.tech [56] [57].

Brazil economy: Race to lower inflation ahead of 2026 elections

References

1. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 2. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 3. www.reuters.com, 4. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.reuters.com, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.investing.com, 13. www.investing.com, 14. www.argusmedia.com, 15. www.reuters.com, 16. ts2.tech, 17. ts2.tech, 18. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 19. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 20. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 21. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 22. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 23. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 24. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 25. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 26. www.reuters.com, 27. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 28. www.reuters.com, 29. www.reuters.com, 30. www.reuters.com, 31. www.reuters.com, 32. www.reuters.com, 33. www.investing.com, 34. www.investing.com, 35. www.reuters.com, 36. www.argusmedia.com, 37. www.reuters.com, 38. www.reuters.com, 39. ts2.tech, 40. ts2.tech, 41. www.reuters.com, 42. www.argusmedia.com, 43. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 44. agenciadenoticias.ibge.gov.br, 45. www.reuters.com, 46. www.reuters.com, 47. www.reuters.com, 48. www.reuters.com, 49. www.reuters.com, 50. www.reuters.com, 51. www.reuters.com, 52. www.investing.com, 53. www.investing.com, 54. www.argusmedia.com, 55. www.reuters.com, 56. ts2.tech, 57. ts2.tech

A technology and finance expert writing for TS2.tech. He analyzes developments in satellites, telecommunications, and artificial intelligence, with a focus on their impact on global markets. Author of industry reports and market commentary, often cited in tech and business media. Passionate about innovation and the digital economy.

Google’s $3B AI Bet Skyrockets TeraWulf (WULF) Stock – Latest News & Analysis
Previous Story

Google’s $3B AI Bet Skyrockets TeraWulf (WULF) Stock – Latest News & Analysis

BigBear.ai Stock Soars 80% in 2025 – Is This AI-Defense Gem the Next Big Thing?
Next Story

BigBear.ai Stock Soars 80% in 2025 – Is This AI-Defense Gem the Next Big Thing?

Stock Market Today

  • DKM Wealth Management Opens New QQQ Position: 7,935 Shares Worth $4.76M
    October 11, 2025, 6:39 AM. DKM Wealth Management, Inc. disclosed a new position in Invesco QQQ Trust, Series 1 (QQQ) on Oct 10, 2025, buying about 7,935 shares for an estimated $4.76 million in Q3 2025. The trade lifts QQQ exposure to roughly $4.76 million, representing about 3.8% of the firm’s reportable U.S. equity assets for the period. QQQ tracks the NASDAQ-100 Index, offering diversified exposure to tech and growth stocks with periodic rebalancing. This is a fresh stake and not among the fund’s top holdings by market value in Q3 2025. The move highlights a tilt toward a broad tech-heavy index ETF rather than single-name bets, balancing potential upside in tech with diversified risk.
  • Trump Threatens Export Controls on Boeing Parts as China Trade Tensions Escalate
    October 11, 2025, 6:38 AM. President Trump signaled the U.S. could impose export controls on Boeing aircraft parts in response to China’s curbs on rare-earth exports. The move would target the U.S. aerospace supply chain, including CFM International engines from GE Aerospace and Safran. Beijing’s actions have already clipped potential orders, while Boeing remains active in talks to sell hundreds of jets to China. Analysts say any short-term hit to Boeing from a controls shock could be modest, even as the policy debate highlights how trade policy and export controls intertwine with aerospace. China’s share of Boeing’s orders has fallen to under 5%, though airlines still operate thousands of jets. A ban on western parts could also stall the domestically built COMAC C919, underscoring broader geopolitical risk to aerospace ecosystems.
  • Benson Investment Management Adds IBM Stake: 22,622 Shares Worth $6.38M in Q3 2025 13F
    October 11, 2025, 6:08 AM. Benson Investment Management disclosed a new position in IBM, buying about 22,622 shares valued at roughly $6.38 million based on Q3 2025 prices. The stake equals 2.18% of the firm's AUM reported in its 13F filing for the quarter ended September 30, 2025, marking IBM as a reportable holding for Benson. At the time, top holdings included GLD, GOOGL, MSFT, NVDA and AMZN, with IBM entering Benson's top holdings by size after the trade. IBM traded near $288.23 on Oct 9, 2025, up about 23% over the past year and ahead of the S&P 500 by roughly 12.5 percentage points. The move highlights Benson's tilt toward large-cap tech and hybrid cloud leadership.
  • Trump Announces 100% Tariff on China Starting November, Markets Brace for Impact
    October 11, 2025, 5:06 AM. Former U.S. President Donald Trump announced on Truth Social that the United States will impose a 100% tariff on imports from China starting November 1, 2025, with possible export controls on critical software and broad restrictions on rare earth minerals. The move reopens the U.S.–China trade dispute and could inject volatility into global markets as investors weigh implications for stocks, bonds, and currencies. The post signals renewed U.S. leverage ahead of talks and a broader push to level the playing field in key tech and strategic sectors. Markets will monitor implementation timelines, exemptions, and Beijing’s likely response, including potential tariff retaliation and new export controls.
  • Regal Rexnord (RRX) Slides Below 200-Day Moving Average
    October 11, 2025, 4:52 AM. Regal Rexnord Corp (RRX) slipped after briefly crossing below its 200-day moving average of $140.53, trading as low as $134.15 per share. The stock was down about 11.9% for the session, with the last trade near $132.99. The move comes as investors note a 52-week range of $108.28-$176.91. A fall below the 200-DMA can signal near-term weakness, though bulls will look for a reclaim of the long-term average. The article also highlights other dividend stocks that recently crossed their 200-day threshold.
Go toTop