SAO PAULO, March 17, 2026, 13:39 UTC-03.
This isn’t about a new filing from Bradesco. Reuters said Tuesday that Brazil’s monetary policy committee heads into this week’s decision with just seven out of nine seats occupied—injecting a dose of politics into an already anticipated meeting. Reuters
Bradesco faces a tricky spot here: with big exposure to local funding costs, any rate cut matters. Lower rates would help lift credit appetite and take some heat off borrowers. But with February inflation down to 3.81% and oil jumping, the market can’t call it—traders are split between a 25bp trim, a 50bp cut, or no move at all. One basis point equals one-hundredth of a percentage point. Banco Daycoval’s Julio Barros flagged a “bias toward holding interest rates,” while Capital Economics’ Liam Peach cited the energy market swings as bringing “a lot of uncertainty.” Reuters
Back in January, things looked different. The central bank kept the Selic rate steady at 15%—a level last seen in 2006—and suggested that rate cuts might begin in March. Flavio Serrano, chief economist at Banco BMG, took that as enough of a cue to stick with his call for a 50-basis-point reduction. Reuters
Bradesco goes into the meeting posting stronger operating results compared to last year. According to its February report, the bank’s recurring net income for the fourth quarter came in at R$6.5 billion. Client net interest income increased 18.4% from the prior year, while its loan portfolio hit R$1.089 trillion, an 11% rise. The company aims to boost profitability “gradually and safely,” and is projecting loan growth of 8.5% to 10.5% in 2026.
Some items remain in limbo. Bradesco reported that shareholders signed off on a R$6.67 billion capital increase, new appointments to the board and fiscal council, and plans for the 2025 profit allocation back on March 10. But none of it kicks in until the central bank gives the green light. Securities and Exchange Commission
Selling pressure hit more than just Bradesco. Itau Unibanco’s ADRs settled at $8.17, while Santander Brasil’s slipped to $5.83. Both tickers ended a touch weaker this day, a sign traders were rotating out of the entire sector, not zeroing in on anything unique to Bradesco.
The risk isn’t hard to spot. Should policymakers slow the pace of cuts or leave rates on hold—especially with oil keeping inflation stubborn—Bradesco’s earnings rebound could be on ice until the macro tides shift. Finance Minister Fernando Haddad last week linked the chance for growth above 2% this year directly to interest rates, adding another layer after the government bumped its 2026 inflation projection to 3.7% on the back of the oil shock. Reuters