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Brazil’s April inflation matches forecasts despite growing external risks

By Thomson Reuters May 12, 2026 | 7:41 AM

SAO PAULO, May 12 (Reuters) – Brazil’s inflation was in line with market expectations in April, official data showed on Tuesday, with the 12-month rate remaining within ​the central bank’s target range even as policymakers ‌warn of risks from the Middle East conflict.

Annual inflation in Latin America’s largest economy stood at 4.39% in April, statistics agency IBGE said, up from 4.14% a month earlier but in line with the ‌4.40% ​forecast by economists in a Reuters ⁠poll.

On a monthly basis, ⁠consumer prices rose 0.67%, slowing from a 0.88% increase in March. Economists had expected a 0.69% rise.

Brazil’s central bank last month cut its benchmark interest rate by 25 ​basis points for a second straight meeting to 14.50%, but left its next move on June 16-17 open, ⁠citing emerging inflation risks as the ⁠U.S.-Israel war with Iran drags on.

Policymakers, who ​had kept borrowing costs at a nearly 20-year high since ​July 2025 before starting an easing cycle in March, ‌have vowed to bring inflation back to their 3% target, plus or minus 1.5 percentage points.

Private economists surveyed by the bank, however, have raised their 2026 inflation forecast for ⁠nine consecutive weeks, now seeing it ending the year at 4.91%.

The April increase in inflation was mainly driven by food and ⁠beverage prices, which ‌rose 1.34%. On the other hand, transportation ⁠costs were nearly unchanged after jumping in March ​following ‌the global oil price shock related to ​the Iran ⁠war.

“The rise in inflation in April shouldn’t prevent the central bank from continuing with its cautious monetary easing cycle,” Capital Economics’ senior emerging markets economist Liam Peach said, forecasting 25-basis-point cuts at each of the upcoming meetings.

(Reporting by Gabriel AraujoEditing ​by Keith Weir)