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Brazil growth holds in Q1, but steep March fall points to cooling

By Thomson Reuters May 18, 2026 | 7:41 AM

BRASILIA, May 18 (Reuters) – Brazil’s economic activity grew 1.3% in the first quarter from the previous three months, central bank data showed on Monday, despite a sharper-than-expected contraction in March.

The IBC-Br ​index, a proxy for gross domestic product, fell 0.7% in ‌March from February on a seasonally adjusted basis, compared with a 0.2% drop expected in a Reuters poll.

All sectors tracked by the central bank declined, with services, the main driver of Brazil’s economy, falling 0.8% from the previous month.

Rafael Perez, an economist ‌at ​Suno Research, said March’s performance reflected a normalization ⁠after strong growth in ⁠the first two months of the year.

“Part of this movement reflects a high comparison base, as well as the ongoing effects of restrictive monetary policy on economic activity. Even so, the economy remained resilient ​in the quarter, mainly supported by growth in services and industry,” he wrote in a note to clients.

Perez projected that official GDP data, ⁠due to be released on May 29, ⁠will show growth of 1.0% in the first quarter ​from the previous three months.

That was faster than the fourth quarter of last ​year when growth was just 0.1% quarter on quarter.

The central ‌bank data is compiled from the bank’s estimates for agriculture, industry and services, as well as production-related taxes.

The data for March adds to signs of an economic slowdown this year, with the central bank expected to ⁠continue its monetary easing cycle despite renewed inflationary pressures, partly driven by higher energy prices following the U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran.

The IBC-Br index rose 1.8% in ⁠the 12 months ‌through March on an unadjusted basis, and increased 3.1% ⁠from a year earlier.

Economists surveyed weekly by the central ​bank ‌expect economic activity to increase by 1.85% in 2026, ​after a ⁠2.3% expansion last year.

Policymakers have cut interest rates by 25 basis points at each of their last two meetings, bringing the benchmark rate down to 14.50%.

The bank targets 3% inflation but annual inflation in Latin America’s largest economy accelerated to 4.39% in April.

(Reporting by Marcela Ayres; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama ​and Susan Fenton)