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Higher prices for commodities from coffee to soybeans and iron ore to crude
oil, have brought new found wealth to Brazil. Since the election of President
Lula de Silva in 2003, Brazil has emerged as a major player in global trade,
and its currency - the real, has climbed by 70% against the US dollar, with
a trade deficit shifting into a massive surplus. The Bovespa index on the Sao
Paulo Stock Exchange reached a record high of 52,750 this week, and is up 18.2%
so far in 2007.
Brazil economic output rose to $1.6 trillion last year, or half of South America's
GDP, and making it the ninth largest economy in the world. Brazil occupies
half the South American continent, contains half of its population with 200
million, and is the fifth most populous country in the world. However, there
are vast disparities in the distribution of the country's land and wealth,
and Brazil has the greatest number of people living in poverty in all of Latin
America.
Still, Brazil's arrival as a global economic power is linked to its vast mineral
resources, particularly iron ore, which is highly prized by major steel makers
in China, Europe, India, Korea, and Russia. Thanks to the development of Petrobras'
offshore oil fields, and the country's extensive use of ethanol, Brazil has
also become self-sufficient in energy, ending decades of dependence on foreign
oil imports.

Besides iron ore, Brazil is blessed with other valuable minerals such as,
chrome ore, copper, manganese, diamonds, gem stones, gold, nickel, tin, bauxite,
uranium, platinum, and zinc. About a third of Brazil's economy is linked to
agriculture, and it's the world's largest exporter of coffee, sugar, cattle,
orange juice, and surpassed the US as the biggest exporter of soybeans in January
2006. The rain forests of the Amazon River basin produce timber, rubber, and
other forest products such as Brazilian nuts and pharmaceutical plants.
The emergence of the "Commodity Super Cycle," combined with a global economy
expanding at an annualized 5% rate for the past four years, helped to lift
Brazil's exports to a record $137 billion in 2006, with agricultural exports
accounting for roughly 37% of foreign sales. Brazil's trade surplus expanded
to $47 billion last year, up from $2.6 billion just 4 years earlier, and so
far in the first four months of 2007, the trade surplus was $13 billion, or
4.3% higher than in the previous year.
Ravenous
Chinese demand for Brazilian soybeans has doubled since the turn of the century.
Even so, Brazil's agricultural potential has yet to be fully exploited. It's
larger than the USA's lower 48 states, and today grows crops on only 19% of
its 790 million cultivable acres.
Brazil also plans to build 73 new sugar mills between now and 2012, in order
to raise its ethanol production. Brazil can make ethanol for about $1 a gallon,
and expects ethanol exports to double to $1.3 billion in 2010, largely to Japan
and Sweden.
Brazil's Companhia Vale do Rio Doce (CVRD), the world's largest iron ore miner,
has reserves estimated to last for 500 years.
But beneath the glossy export figures are some worrisome trends. Higher export
prices accounted for 72% of the increase in Brazilian exports last year, while
foreign sales volume increased by only 5.3%, much less than the 11.6% growth
in 2005 and the 17.6% in 2004. The unrelenting strength of the Brazilian real
is starting to cut into exporter earnings, and would become more troublesome
for exporters if global commodity prices flatten out or move lower in 2007.
Bank of Brazil's defense of US dollar Disintegrates
Over the past 14-months, the Bank of Brazil (BoB) fought hard to prevent the
real from appreciating against the currencies of its major trading partners
in Europe (26% of trade) the United States (24%) and Asia (12%). Each day this
year, the BoB intervened in the foreign currency market to mop-up the US dollars
flowing into the country, and tried to put an artificial floor under the greenback
at 2.10-reals.

Brazil's finance minister Guido Mantega said the central bank's foreign currency
reserves soared to $120 billion in April, up from $52 billion in March 2006,
during the bank's 14-month defense of the US dollar at 2.1-reals. On May 3rd,
the BoB stepped up its intervention in the market and offered about $3.1 billion
of reverse currency swaps, compared with a weekly average of $600 million,
and executed another $1 billion of swaps on May 16th, but failed to halt the
dollar's slide below 2.0-reals.
History Turned Upside-down
It's a 180 degree sea change from June 2002, when the Brazilian real had plunged
to 2.84 against the dollar, and Brazil's 8% Brady bond due 2014, fell to three-year
lows, to yield 21.1%, their highest level since 1995, shortly after Mexico
devalued its peso. Traders were gripped with fear that Brazil's leading presidential
candidate, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, of the Socialist Workers' Party, wouldn't
control spending nor pay-off the country's 929 billion reals ($382 billion)
of debt.
To stop the bleeding in August 2002, the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
provided Brazil's central bank with an emergency $30 billion credit line for
intervention to stabilize the battered real. The IMF agreement allowed Brazil
to spend an additional $10 billion of its foreign currency reserves to protect
the real, which effectively gave Brazil $40 billion to avert an economic meltdown.
But on October 14, 2002, Brazil's central bank was forced to jack-up its overnight
Selic rate by 3% following an emergency policy meeting to 21%, citing worsening
inflation sparked by the fall of the real. The Brazilian currency had lost
more than 40% of its value against the dollar in the first 10 months of 2002.
Banco Central de Brasil also raised bank reserve requirements to reduce the
amount of reals in the financial system, but the currency still fell 1% to
close lower at 3.85 per dollar.
Brazil becomes a Magnet for Global Hot Money
Today, traders are looking at Brazil with rose colored lenses, and its double-digit
deposits rates of around 12.50%, are still acting as a powerful magnet for
hot money flows from around the world. The Bank of Brazil has slashed its overnight
Selic lending rate 15 consecutive times from a high of 19.75% in September
2005 to an all-time low of 12.5% on April 19th, but hasn't been able to stop
the dollar's slide.
Instead, global traders are snapping up many of the 50-companies listed in
the blue-chip Bovespa stock index before Beijing goes on its buying spree for
key assets in global markets. Traders can also buy Brazil's benchmark zero-coupon
bond due in January 2008, denominated in reals, and yielding a juicy 11.43
percent.

On May 15th, Brazil's central bank chief Henrique Meirelles signaled a shift
in its intervention tactics by conceding that, "The central bank has no target
for the exchange rate. At the same time, the central bank won't allow prices
to be distorted or move in ways unrelated to economic fundamentals," he said.
Brazil's finance minister Guido Mantega also relented to a stronger real on
April 27th.
"The real's appreciation is almost inevitable and the biggest challenge today.
Obviously, this causes losses for some economic sectors. We aren't going to
artificially fix the currency issue. The country is very solid and, unfortunately
or fortunately, this influences the currency," Mantega said. Thus, Brazil is
distancing itself from China's manhandling the dollar /yuan within a tight
trading band.
Benefits of a Stronger Real outweigh the Costs
Although Brazilian exports could be hurt by a stronger real against its major
trading partners this year, the losses could be mitigated if commodity prices
stay high or climb higher, and if the global economy continues to expand at
a 5% rate. The Brazilian economy could also receive a boost if South Korean
car maker Hyundai opens up a new factory in the country to produce 100,000
vehicles per year.
In other areas, the benefits of a stronger real greatly outweigh the costs,
by applying downward pressure on import prices and inflation, already among
the lowest in Latin America. Consumer prices, as measured by the benchmark
IPCA index, rose 2.96% in the 12 months through March, its lowest rate since
February 1999, and compares with the central bank's inflation target of 4.5%
for this year and into 2008.

The stronger real and lower inflation pressures, led to an enormous drop in
long-term government bond yields from a record high of 25.6% in September 2002
to as low as 5.60% today. The average yield spread on Brazilian government
bonds traded in US$, over comparable US Treasuries, as measured by the JP Morgan
Emerging Markets bond index fell to an all-time low of 138 basis points on
May 20th.
The "Commodity Super Cycle" has boosted the foreign currency reserves of Latin
American countries, allowing them to buy back dollar-denominated bonds and
instead rely more on bond sales in local currencies to meet their financing
needs. Emerging-market nations sold $37.4 billion of US dollar denominated
debt in 2006, down from $47.7 billion in 2005. Merrill Lynch predicts bond
sales will fall 32% this year to $25.4 billion, hardly enough to satisfy the
demand of "yen carry" traders, who bought $18 billion of Brazilian debt last
year.

The yield on Brazil's dollar bond, due in 2040, fell to a record low of 5.50%
last week, after Standard & Poor's boosted its sovereign credit rating
to BB+ from BB, or one notch below investment grade. The long-term credit rating
denominated in Brazilian reals was lifted by two notches to BBB from BB+. S&P
also upgraded the country's short-term local currency sovereign credit rating
to A- from single B.
"The efforts by the government to reduce vulnerability to interest rate and
to foreign exchange rate fluctuations have been very positive," said Standard & Poor's
on May 16th, referring to the central bank's massive build-up of foreign currency
reserves. Thus, in a virtuous cycle of events, high commodity prices have boosted
Brazil's exports and trade surplus, which in turn, strengthened the real and
allowed the central bank to build-up its foreign exchange reserves.
More foreign exchange on hand at the central bank improves Brazil's ability
to service its outstanding debt, which in turn, boosts its credit rating and
lowers long-term bond yields. Coupled with an easier monetary policy and a
16% growth rate of the M3 money supply, it's no wonder that Brazil's Bovespa
index has gone ballistic.
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