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Panoramic overview Brazilian economy

August 29th, 2009 - one response

Brazil posted an annualized growth rate of 6,47% in the second quarter of 2009.  Last week, Guide Mantega presented the August update on the state of the Brazilian economy, you can download the full presentation here.

Some highlights:

1. The Selic interest rate was lowered to 8,75% throughout the last year.  A historical low record.   Yet, the Brazilian Central Bank preserves its tight monetary policy, since inflation is today at 4%; the average of 2009 is expected to be 4,3%.  As you can see in the below chart, the Brazilian inflation rate remained below 6,6% since 2004 on and the Brazilian Central Bank maintains now an inflation target of 4,5% in the coming years.
Compare this to South Africa where the South African reserve bank lowered its prime interest rate to 7%, but where the inflation remains at 6,9%, last July it went up from 6,7% in June.

inflation brazil_resize

2. Since 2001, the Brazilian commercial balance has been positive and also today it remains positive.  This in sharp contrast to the structural negative commercial balances of Belgium and South Africa.

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3. The Brazilian economy had a short temporary dip in the 4th quarter of 2008, but recovered strongly in the first and second quarter  of 2009.  The pace of recovery was noticeably stronger than the Chinese pace of recovery.  Luize Guilhereme Chymura of the Institute of the Getulio Vargas Foundation estimates the Brazilian GDP will grow 4% next year, but that he would not be surprised if it grows 5 or 6 percent.
“I believe the year of 2010 will be very positive for Brazilians. The economy will grow, the inflation will be low, and the local currency Real will likely appreciate against the U.S. dollar. The appreciation is good news for Brazilian consumers, as it means they can buy cheaper imported products,” he said.
“With this favorable economic scenario, the government will have a lot to say in next year’s presidential race. The government’s candidate will benefit from the positive economy, as well as from the salary rise of public employees,” Schymura said, referring to President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s chief of staff Dilma Rousseff, who will run for the October 2010 presidential election.
But Schymura said the appreciation of the Real is bad news for the local manufacturing sector, which will face growing competition from cheaper imports.

growth brazil_resize

4. Brazil has no foreign debts, their foreign reserves grew to 213,7 billion US$.

international reserves brazil_resize

5. The interest rates are at a historical low of 8,75%.  However, the real interest rate is now 4%, which leaves the Brazilian reserve bank a more than comfortable buffer whenever needed.  In South Africa the real interest rate is today quasi 0%.    The below graph explains to a big extent the delta today between Brazil and most other countries: Brazil has’nt been polluted in the last decade by a cheap credit tsunami (let be subpime problems).   The focus of the Brazilian central bank has been inflation control and a tight monetary policy, quite the reverse of the policy in the US and to a certain extent Europe or South Africa.  It is only since 2002 that intrest rates came below 20%  and only since this year are interest rates in Brazil for the first time in history single-digit interest rates.  This means that for the first time a generation of consumers can get a bond to buy a house or appartment.

interest rates worldwide_resize

And expect this to happen: last week, Banco do Brasil, Latin America’s largest lender announced that they may double credit to individuals over the next decade as falling interest rates spur demand for car and home loans. Personal loans may climb to as high as 50 percent of the state-controlled bank’s total portfolio from 27% in the second quarter. Such lending rose 69% to 68.5 billion reais ($37.1 billion) in the three months ending June 30 after the central bank cut the benchmark below 10 percent for the first time.   Brazilian banks and households are completely unleveraged compared to their European and American counterparts and now is the time for Brazilian banks to seize the opportunity; read the full article on Bloomberg.

6. Brazilian banks keep lending money.  Below a chart comparing the rate of lending of all banks in Brazil.  The red line are the national private banks, the green the foreign banks and the blue lines are the Brazilian public bancs.  Actually, in Brazil more than 80% of the residential real estate financing happens through Caixa Economica and Banco do Brasil, two banks where the government has a majority stake.  If only the Belgian government had been wise enough to follow the same strategy and nationalise Fortis bank when the “shit hitted the fan”.

credit banks brazil_resize

7. The cost of this crisis.  The below chart is absolutely impressive (2009 and 2010 estimates of the IMF).  While the United States will spend 13,6% of their GDP on stimulus packages in 2009 and 9,7% of GDP in 2010, Brazil will only spend 1,9% of their GDP on stimulus packages in 2009 and 0,8% in 2010.    Also see the huge difference between Brazil and Chine.
Another surprising factor is the countries which will spend more on stimuli in 2010 than 2009: Australia, Germany, Italy, France and South Africa.

fiscal measures crisis_resize

8. The below chart needs to be compared with the Belgian figures…
End 2009 the Brazilian public debt will be 42,5% (coming from 53,5% in 2003); the IMF even projects only 41,9% for 2009.  This figure will decrease gradually to 28,4% by 2013.  In Belgium the graph goes the opposite direction: by 2014, the public debt will rise to 110% of the Belgian GDP.

brazilian debt

9. Brazilian confidence.  63% of the Brazilians say the crisis only has a slight or no impact on them; a record-low compared to other countries.  Same reason: Brazilian households are not leveraged and no jobs are lossed.

impact crisis

10.  Since January 2009, the Brazilian stock index Bovespa went up 70%.

stock exchange worldwide_resize

11. While the South African retail sales is in constant decline, Brazilian retail sales kept growing all since 2006 at rates above 4%.  In July retail sales grew 5,7%. Predictions are that the country’s retail sales will grow from around US$368bn in 2008 to US$573bn by 2013. Generally positive trends in underlying economic growth, an enormous and growing population and rising disposable income are key factors behind the forecast growth in Brazil’s retail sales. Easier access to credit and the emergence of a wealthier middle class are also likely to see the value of the retail segment increase during the forecast period.

retail sales brazil_resize

With the population increasing from 192 million in 2008 to an estimated 204 million by 2013, GDP per capita is forecast to rise 39.7% (!) by the end of 2013, reaching US$11,449. This means that consumption per capita will rise from US$7,219 in 2008 to US$9,275 by 2013. The national monthly minimum wage rose 26% in real terms between 2003 and 2006, and by 2008 the average annual salary had reached US$9,160.

12. In the same line: car sales were in July up to 285.400 cars sold a month, this is a historic record for the country.

car sales brazil

13. The crisis never had a really big effect on employment in Brazil. While in 2006 and 2007 Brazil had unemplyment figures hoovering around 10%, the unemployment figures never went above 8,9% in 2009. Since April unemployment has decreased substantially, reaching 8,0% in July, which is the same rate as in July 2008, before the crisis. Compare this to the unempoyment figures in the United States.

unemployment brazil_resize

Also don’t underestimate the positive effect of Brazil’s demographics.
In 2005, 67.8% of the Brazilian population was described by the UN as active, with 40.3% in the crucial 20-44 age range. More than 84% of the population was classified by the UN as urban. By 2015, the urban population is forecast to have exceeded 88%, with 39.5% in the 20-44 age band, with 66.9% of the population is expected to be active.

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Bloomberg reported last Friday that Brazil’s retail sales rose again more than expected. Retail sales went up 1,7% from the previous month, significant stronger than the 1,2% which was forecasted.

Most surprising was the increase in the sale of computer equipment which went up 15,6% compared to last year. If you take the broader index which includes automobile and construction materials, the index went up 10,2%. On a monthly basis, the broader index went up 6,5%, the biggest increase since its launch in 2007.

Good news is that the central bank remains cautious. Which is good; central banks which keep a strong eye on future inflation targeting have our preference.

Even though Florianopolis is surrounded by the airports of Porto Alegre, Joinville and Curitiba, it is one of the fastest growing airports of Brazil. In 2007 it received 1,9 million passengers and from January – June 2009, it received 1.045.086 passengers.
The airport started operating in 1922 and the current terminal of 8.440 m2 was scaled to cater for 980.000 passangers a year; today it is handling double of that amount.

As a comparison: Port Elzibath in South Africa handled 760.282 passengers in 2008, George handled 336.603 passengers.

The plans for expanding Florianopolis airport date from 2004 and would bring it’s capacity to 2,7 million yearly passengers.
The passengers terminal would be expanded from 8.440 m2 to 33.800 m2.
The check-in counters would be expanded to 36.
The parking space for planes would be expanded form 20.187 m2 to 141.700 m2.
4 embarcation bridges would be build
Parking space would be expanded from 500 to 1.850 places.

Finally, after some political pressure, it seems that the project would now kickstart and would be finalized by 2012; I’ll make that 2013, just in time for the World Soccer.  By 2010, the road to the airport will be duplicated, the project has been signed off by the municipality.

The airport is extremely convenient, with GOL you are a 3h, 150 € flight away from Buenos Aires and with TAM or Oceanair you fly in 1h10 minutes for 50 – 100 € (depending if you get a promo) into Conhonas in the heart of Sao Paulo.

Some pictures of the expansion project:

airport florianopolis

airport florianopolis 5

(more…)

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Rio de Janeiro: Porto do Açu

August 8th, 2009 - one response

In 2008, MPX announced the plans for a new Ocean Port for Rio de Janeiro: Porto do Açu.
Strong believing in the prospects of logistic players in Brazil, why bought MPX at 6,95 R$ mid January; today they are trading at 17,85 R$, that is a 156% profit.    We believe the stock has the potential to go above 40 R$ by mid 2010.

Port Açu will start operations in 2010.  It is located 280 km Northeastfrom Rio, just up from Macae and will be serving Rio, Minas Gerais, Espirito Santo and the oil rigs of the Macae area.

Porto do Açu, São João da Barra

The Port, located approximately 280 km northeast of Rio, is under construction and should be completed by the end of 2011.

On July3d, the Governor of Rio de Janeiro State,  announced that the Chinese company WISCO will construct a steel mill at Porto do Açu in partnership with Grupo EBX investments.  The project will create 20.000 jobs.  Grupo EBX is of Brazil’s richest man Eike Batista.

A few days later, China’s JAC Motors confirmed that they will build a vehicle plant in Brazil, also in the new Porto do Açu. The link with the steel mill of WISCO is clear. JAC Motors is China’s leading bus chassis manufacturer. It produces 450,000 vehicles a year including light trucks and multipurpose vehicles.

JACmotors

We’ll keep a close eye on the developments there.

This week’s Business Week features an article on the expanding Brazilian middle class.

Some quotes:
Just as important, though, is Brazil’s huge domestic market. While outsiders focus on the country’s shipments of iron ore, steel, and soy to China, exports are just 12% of Brazil’s $1.5 trillion economy. It’s the 190 million people and the fast-growing middle class—now more than half the population—that drive growth.
The country’s improving prospects create huge opportunities for entrepreneurs small and large. “Brazil has had so many crises over the years, people got used to them,” says David Neeleman, the founder of JetBlue, who last December started a low-cost Brazilian airline called Azul (Portuguese for “blue”). “I don’t think they’re at all fazed by this crisis—everyone seems to be focused on buying their first car, getting their first credit card.
A beauty salon in Rio de Janeiro highlights the new middle-class buying power. Despite its location in the posh Ipanema neighborhood, the clientele is mostly housemaids, hospital clerks, and other women from relatively modest circumstances. The salon is the creation of Heloisa Assis, known as Zica. One of 13 children, she grew up in a slum supported by her laundress mother. Like many Brazilians of African descent, she had brittle, kinky hair that she says hobbled her chances of getting a decent job. Zica tested homemade potions to tame her unruly Afro and finally came up with a formula that created flowing ringlets. She patented her discovery and in 1993 opened a salon, calling it Beleza Natural, or “Natural Beauty.” She soon had customers lining up at 5 a.m.
That revived auto sales, which in June hit 300,000 vehicles—an all-time high. Even hapless General Motors is enjoying fat times in Brazil, where it’s investing $1 billion through 2012 to develop a new small car. Whirlpool, which has a 40% share of Brazil’s appliance market, has benefited, too. Sales jumped 20% in May and June compared with a year earlier.

If you really want to understand the Brazilian middle class, you should visit with your wife one of the Beleza Natural beauty salons and talk with some women there, ask them about their job, what they earn, what their earning growth was the last years, how they see the Brazilian economy evolving,…

We wrote previously on the Brazilian middle class, but the below graph of Business Week summarizes it best: today, more than 51% of the Brazilian families earn between 616 and 2.579 US$ monthly, consider that Brazil counts 191.200.000 habitants and that the vast majority of the middle class is geographically concentraded in the zone Belo Horizonte -  Rio de Janeiro – Curitiba – Porto Alegre, Sao Paulo and you realize what a massive buying power this represents.

businessweek brazil

The article refers to Whirlpool in Brazil (Brazilian brand name: Brastemp), which has a 40% share of Brazil’s appliance market and who’s biggest manufacturing plant is in Joinville.  Sales of Whirlpool jumped 20% in May and June 2009 compared to the previous year which was already a record-breaker.

Neeleman’s Azul started flying end 2008, now has a 70% seat occupancy and expects profit for 2009.

Many people are now jumping on the MSCI Brazil (EWZ) bandwagon.  We bought in early March and yielded a 47% rise, yet we took our profit last week and converted into BRF; more on this later.

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