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Brazil lifts inflation outlook on oil shock, sees shallower rate-cut cycle

By Thomson Reuters May 18, 2026 | 12:43 PM

BRASILIA, May 18 (Reuters) – Brazil’s Finance Ministry on Monday sharply raised its inflation forecast for this year to 4.5% from the 3.7% projected in March, citing the ​impact of the Middle East conflict on oil and ‌fuel prices and foreseeing a more modest monetary easing cycle.

Inflation is now seen at the top of the central bank’s official target range, centered at 3% with a tolerance of 1.5 percentage points on either side.

According ‌to ​the ministry’s economic policy secretariat, the average ⁠oil price estimate for ⁠2026 has risen 25% since its last forecast two months ago, to $91.25 per barrel this year.

That more than offset the effect of a stronger currency expected by year-end, the ministry ​said, noting that the projection also incorporates the impact of mitigation measures adopted by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s ⁠government to limit the pass-through of ⁠higher fuel prices to the domestic market.

The leftist ​administration now expects the rate-cut cycle launched in March by the ​central bank to leave the benchmark Selic rate at ‌13% at the end of this year, compared with a previous estimate of 12%.

The Selic currently stands at 14.5% following two consecutive cuts of 25 basis points each by policymakers.

Despite the ⁠revisions, the government remains more optimistic than the market.

Economists surveyed weekly by the central bank have raised their inflation estimate for this year ⁠for a 10th ‌consecutive week, to 4.92%, and see the ⁠Selic ending the year at a higher 13.25%.

While ​the ‌government kept its economic growth forecast unchanged at ​2.3% for ⁠2026, pointing to an expected slowdown in the second and third quarters and a slight rebound toward year-end, the median estimate in the survey of economists points to gross domestic product growth of 1.85% this year.

(Reporting by Marcela Ayres; Editing by Gabriel Araujo ​and Aurora Ellis)