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油价跌至75美元难撬巴西降息,中资企业融资成本短期无望缓解

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Oil drop gives little room for more Selic cuts

国际油价暴跌至75美元/桶,但巴西通胀预期脱锚、财政扩张及服务业高通胀制约降息空间,Selic利率年内难破14%,在巴中资企业融资成本与汇率风险短期难以缓解。

为什么值得关注

Selic利率年内难破14%直接影响在巴中资企业融资成本与汇率风险,涉及制造业、基建、贸易等行业。

截至2025年7月初,国际油价已从每桶100美元以上跌至75美元,接近伊朗战争前水平。然而,巴西利率市场、Copom数字期权及Itaú、Santander等主要金融机构预测均显示,Selic基准利率今年不太可能大幅降至14%以下。对于在巴西经营的中资企业而言,这意味着融资成本高企、汇率波动风险持续的格局短期内难以改变,直接影响项目融资、利润汇回及本地信贷安排。

国际油价自5月中旬以来大幅下跌,目前徘徊在75美元/桶附近,低于巴西央行自身假设的2027年一季度85美元/桶水平。但油价与短期利率的关联性已明显减弱。根据Valor International报道,Itaú Unibanco经济研究主管Fernando Gonçalves指出,收益率曲线与油价的关系曾非常紧密,但近期突然瓦解,曲线走高,反映市场对财政刺激的广泛担忧。Copom数字期权市场显示,8月降息25个基点的概率为72%,但9月维持利率的概率高达57%,表明市场对进一步宽松持谨慎态度。Santander经济学家Marco Antonio Caruso表示,油价下跌可能促使部分市场参与者修正通胀预测,Santander已将2025年IPCA通胀预测从5.2%下调至5.0%,但仍预计仅再降息两次至13.75%。Itaú则更为保守,预计仅再降息25个基点,年底Selic维持在14%。央行沟通继续受到批评,市场认为其隐含地更关注经济活动而非通胀。

对于在巴西的中资企业,这一利率环境直接传导至多个业务环节。首先,本地融资成本居高不下,企业通过巴西银行体系获取雷亚尔贷款的利息负担加重,影响项目投资回报率。其次,高利率支撑雷亚尔汇率,但油价下跌可能逆转此前部分货币升值,增加汇率对冲成本。此外,扩张性财政和信贷政策背景恶化了风险认知,中资企业在参与巴西基建、能源、农业等长周期项目时,需重新评估资金成本与收益模型。底稿未涉及中资企业直接影响,但通过融资成本与汇率机制间接传导,尤其对制造业、贸易和基础设施领域的中资企业冲击最为直接。

CBI解读:底稿数据表明,油价下跌并未如市场预期般为巴西降息打开空间,核心障碍在于通胀预期脱锚、服务业通胀高企以及财政扩张带来的风险溢价。CBI认为,这一现象反映出巴西央行在通胀与经济增长之间的两难选择——尽管油价下跌有助于降低输入性通胀,但国内结构性因素(财政刺激、信贷扩张)抵消了这一利好。CBI观察,这与2023-2024年巴西央行率先降息时的市场逻辑形成对比,当时油价下跌曾被视为降息催化剂,如今关联性减弱,说明市场已重新定价巴西主权风险。横向对比,类似情况在墨西哥、哥伦比亚等拉美经济体亦有出现,但巴西因财政赤字规模更大,利率敏感度更高。

待观察:1)8月Copom会议实际降息幅度及会后声明对通胀风险的措辞变化;2)巴西财政部2026年预算草案中财政支出上限的调整方案,预计9月提交国会;3)国际油价是否持续低于央行85美元/桶假设,以及其对2027年通胀预测的修正影响。

CBI 观察编辑判断

事实层面,油价与利率关联性减弱、通胀预期脱锚、财政扩张是降息主要障碍。CBI认为,巴西央行当前更关注经济活动而非通胀的沟通倾向,可能进一步削弱市场对宽松周期的信心,中资企业应做好高利率环境持续至2026年的准备。

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信息概要

类型
市场数据
方向
巴西
分类
金融监管
层级
编辑整理
地点
在巴中资企业,尤其是基建、能源、制造业和贸易领域。
核验
待核验
对象
在巴中资企业投资者金融机构
话题
金融政策行业趋势

来源信息

来源
Valor International
原文标题
Oil drop gives little room for more Selic cuts
原始语言
英语
原文链接
查看原文 →
编辑
Clara Lin
查看原文(英语

Oil drop gives little room for more Selic cuts

Marco Antonio Caruso Rogerio Vieira/Valor The sharp drop in international oil prices, now hovering near levels seen before the start of the war in Iran, may not translate into much more room for monetary easing. Across the interest-rate market, Monetary Policy Committee (Copom) digital options, and economists’ forecasts at major financial institutions, the prevailing view is that the Selic base rate is unlikely to fall much below 14% this year. Since mid-May, the link between oil prices and short-term interest rates has weakened. As investors reassess the Selic’s path, other factors have gained weight as potential obstacles to deeper rate cuts: unanchored inflation expectations, still-high services inflation, and a more expansionary fiscal and credit policy backdrop, which has worsened perceptions of risk. That explains why short-term rates have remained elevated even after oil fell from more than $100 a barrel to $75. Crude is now below the Central Bank’s own assumptions. In its Monetary Policy Report, the bank said it expected oil prices at $85 in the first quarter of 2027. Repeated output gap revisions raise questions over Central Bank’s policy model Central Bank not willing to bring inflation back to target, Occam’s Rocha says New inflation projections increase bets on new rate cut “The relationship between the yield curve and oil was very strong, and then suddenly it started to break down. The curve shifted higher, and I think that reflects broader concern about the fiscal impulse. The market is very likely pricing in a significant impulse, which should not allow for many more cuts,” said Fernando Gonçalves, head of economic research at Itaú Unibanco. He noted that the monetary authority included consumer stimulus in its balance of risks, which now has an upside asymmetry for inflation. In an outlook update published in late June, Itaú made a marginal change to its interest-rate forecasts and now expects only one more 25-basis-point cut in the Selic, which would end the year at 14%. “We saw a substantial drop in oil, but Copom itself shifted to a tougher tone on inflation, which suggests very limited room for cuts,” Gonçalves said. Gonçalves raises another point: the fall in oil helps reverse part of the currency appreciation seen earlier, offsetting some of the disinflationary effect. “When oil prices rose, Brazil’s trade outlook improved, with more foreign currency entering the country, and the exchange rate appreciated. Now, as that move reverses, the expectation is that the trade balance will not be as strong as previously thought, and that pushes the dollar higher. There is some compensation, even if it is not complete.” In practice, Gonçalves said, “there is less room for rate cuts.” Limited easing The Copom digital options market tells a similar story. At Friday (3)’s close, the probability of a 25-basis-point Selic cut in August stood at 72%. But the likelihood that the easing cycle will continue beyond August is far from a consensus, despite the relief from oil prices. The probability of rates being held in September ended the week at 57%. The decline in oil may lead some market participants to revise their IPCA inflation forecasts, said Santander economist, Marco Antonio Caruso. “This is a debate that is gaining traction and could create a downside bias in the short term. We, for example, lowered our IPCA forecast for the year to 5% from 5.2%, partly because of oil,” he said. Santander expects two more Selic cuts, in August and September, taking the benchmark rate to 13.75% by year-end. Beyond oil prices, Caruso said, Copom’s latest communications suggest the committee sees monetary policy as already highly restrictive. “All this engineering around alternative Selic scenarios suggests to me that this is a Central Bank that, in fact, sees the degree of monetary tightening as much greater than the average analyst does. If that is true, there is a cushion. Even using some conservative assumptions, such as worsening [Central Bank’s survey] Focus expectations and exchange-rate deterioration, it is possible to reach the Central Bank’s 3.2% projection for the first quarter of 2028 [released in the Monetary Policy Report] with the Selic at 13.75%,” Caruso said. Central Bank communication The monetary authority’s communication since the latest Copom decision continues to draw criticism from market participants, who see an implicit greater concern with activity than with inflation. “Looking at what is written in the statement, the entire first section is consistent with a rate hike, not a cut. Even so, the Central Bank cuts the Selic… At the end of the day, the justification for the cut was very weak. Looking at the first quarter of 2028 because the model would indicate very abrupt volatility in macroeconomic variables… We are not talking about raising rates, but about keeping them unchanged. It left a very bad impression that, technically, the Central Bank brought elements that argued against cutting rates and still went ahead and cut,” said Marcos De Marchi, chief economist at Oriz Partners. De Marchi said that, if oil continues to fall, part of the market may see room for the easing cycle to continue in August. “But since the start of the conflict, the government has tried to soften the pass-through from oil to consumers as much as possible. For that reason too, our inflation gain does not seem likely to be that significant, especially compared with what happens in the U.S., where pass-through is almost automatic,” he said. Oriz still expects the Selic to remain at 14.25%. De Marchi also highlighted the widening “alligator mouth” between oil and short-term rates. “That is because of fiscal issues. There is no way around it.” De Marchi pointed to recent developments he sees as negative, suggesting there is little room for risk premiums at the short end of the yield curve to ease. In addition to bills moving through Congress that point to higher spending, De Marchi mentioned the Federal Court of Accounts’ validation of public-policy operations outside the budget, which further weakens the Fiscal Responsibility Law, and Rio de Janeiro’s debt renegotiation with the federal government. “The flow of news on public accounts is very poor. My scenario is still for the Selic at 14.25%, although the chance of one more adjustment has increased because of oil,” he said. “We are in a dilemma: should I base my cycle forecast on what I think needs to be done, or on what the Central Bank indicates it would like to do? I prefer to keep a cautious stance.” Long-term expectations At Itaú, Gonçalves does expect some relief in short-term expectations because of oil, but he does not see that spreading to longer horizons. “The impact of oil on 2028 inflation tends to be smaller. When I look at the unanchoring of 2028 expectations, I see Focus trying to assess how credible it is that the Central Bank will reach the target. The fact that there has been a recent increase is a sign that the market sees it as less credible that inflation will get close to the target.” For Gonçalves, a credibility issue has emerged “and it has to do with the perception of a very expansionary fiscal policy at the moment, which signals that it will be difficult to make the necessary adjustment.” In that sense, he said, the market has been seeing a more difficult fiscal adjustment, raising the prospect of pressured inflation and a Central Bank struggling to fulfill its mandate. “These expectations will not fall without a fiscal improvement, and that will not happen anytime soon.”

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油价跌至75美元难撬巴西降息,中资企业融资成本短期无望缓解 | China Brazil Insight