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Brazilian inflation tops target band in early May, clouds easing path

By Thomson Reuters May 27, 2026 | 10:43 AM

SAO PAULO, May 27 (Reuters) – Brazil’s 12-month inflation in early May exceeded the upper end of the central bank’s target range for the first time since October 2025, official ​data showed on Wednesday, raising questions over how far ‌its monetary easing cycle can continue.

Annual inflation in Latin America’s largest economy stood at 4.64% in the first half of May, statistics agency IBGE said, up from 4.37% a month earlier and above the 4.55% forecast by economists ‌in ​a Reuters poll.

Brazil’s central bank has flagged ⁠discomfort with rising inflation expectations ⁠as it seeks to bring the annual consumer price index back to its 3% target, with a tolerance band of plus or minus 1.5 percentage points.

Economists polled weekly by the bank ​currently expect inflation to end this year at 5.04% and 2027 at 4.01%, as the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran drags on ⁠and fears of a supply shock ⁠tied to a strong El Nino weather pattern grow.

The ​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 given the uncertainty.

While the bank’s survey still points to borrowing costs at 13.25% by year-end, some economists now expect a shallower easing cycle, also reflecting ⁠resilient economic activity.

Citi earlier this week forecast a year-end rate of 13.75% and sees further cuts only in the second half of 2027, citing ⁠the de-anchoring of ‌inflation expectations and a more hawkish central bank ⁠tone.

In the month to mid-May, consumer prices rose ​0.62%, ‌slowing from a 0.89% increase a month earlier. ​Economists in ⁠the Reuters poll had expected a 0.53% rise.

The increase was driven mainly by food and beverage prices, which rose 1.38%. Housing and healthcare costs also increased, while transport prices fell after the March oil price shock linked to the Middle East conflict.

(Reporting by Gabriel Araujo. Editing ​by Mark Potter)