Friday, December 7, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: EMERGING MARKETS-Brazil rates rise sharply on inflation surprise

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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EMERGING MARKETS-Brazil rates rise sharply on inflation surprise
Dec 7th 2012, 22:25

Fri Dec 7, 2012 5:25pm EST

  * Brazil IPCA inflation rise 0.6 pct in Nov, above forecasts      * Mexican peso gains after stronger-than-expected US  payrolls      * Brazil real sheds 0.6 pct, Mexico peso up 0.12 pct          By Danielle Fonseca and Natalia Cacioli      SAO PAULO, Dec 7 (Reuters) - Yields on Brazil's  interest-rate futures rose sharply on Friday after  higher-than-forecast inflation data reduced the scope for  additional monetary easing next year, while the Mexican peso  gained after encouraging U.S. payrolls data.      Bets that Brazil would cut its base Selic rate next year to  boost a faltering economy have knocked down domestic interest  rates to all-time lows this week.       Yields on interest rate futures had fallen since last  Friday, after data showed the country's economy grew at only  half the pace expected by economists in the third quarter.      But interest-rate contracts jolted higher on Friday after  Brazil's statistics bureau said November inflation accelerated  to 0.6 percent, above economists' expectations for a 0.5 percent  reading.       Interest-rate contracts maturing in January 2014,  one of the most traded, jumped 13 basis points to 7.0 percent.  That contract traded above 7.3 percent last week, before the  disappointing GDP figure, and slid to 6.87 percent on Thursday.      "What's boosting those contracts is mostly the  higher-than-expected IPCA, which poured cold water on those who  expected interest rates to fall," said Decio Pereira Filho, a  trader with Socopa brokerage in Sao Paulo.      "The latest comments by Tombini also reinforced the view  that the Selic will remain stable," he added.      Brazil's central bank president Alexandre Tombini repeated  late on Thursday that the Selic rate should remain at an  all-time low of 7.25 percent for a "prolonged" period.         His comments echoed the content of minutes of the bank's  latest monetary policy meeting, released earlier on Thursday,  but the mere repetition of the "prolonged period" expression led  some traders to interpret that bets on additional rate cuts were  premature.            CURRENCIES STEADY      Meanwhile, the Brazilian real  shed 0.6 percent  to bid at 2.0904 per dollar, weakening after intervention by the  central bank spurred four sessions of gains.      Brazil's central bank said on Friday it was conducting a  survey to gauge demand for dollars in the foreign exchange  market, suggesting that policymakers could intervene again early  next week to support the currency and setting the real up to  strengthen next week.       A series of measures by the government helped the real rally  nearly 2 percent this week back from its weakest in 3-1/2 years.      The measures, which included strong central bank  intervention and tax changes to facilitate dollar inflows,  signaled an apparent reversal in a recent government strategy  that favored a weaker currency to boost exports.       "The weekend is upon us so folks get more cautious.  Investors' trust is shaken, they're asking themselves, 'what are  the government's intentions?'," said Jaime Ferreira, a manager  at the currency desk at Intercam brokerage in Sao Paulo.      Other Latin American currencies posted gains after data  showed the U.S. economy created 146,000 new jobs in November,  more than the 93,000 positions expected by economists.         The data supported appetite for risk globally, although the  outlook for the U.S. labor market still seemed tepid as the  country's jobless rate fell because people gave up searching for  work.      The Mexican peso gained 0.12 percent, ending the week  with an advance of 0.64 percent during the week.       Data showed speculators raised their bets in favor of the  peso for the second straight week indicating increasing  confidence in a rebound after a recent slump.             Latin American FX prices at 1350 GMT:         Currencies                       daily %  year-to                                     change   date %                            Latest            change   Brazil real              2.0747   -0.62.    -10.6                                                Mexico peso             12.8550     0.12      8.7                                                Argentina peso*          6.4500    -0.16    -26.7                                                Chile peso             476.8000     0.02      8.9                                                Colombia peso        1,796.7500     0.15      7.9                                                Peru sol                 2.5720     0.12      4.9                                                * Argentine peso's rate between                     brokerages  
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