Plus500

28.5.08

Investiment Grade

Date Of Release: May 28, 2008 14:04

DBRS has upgraded the Long-Term Foreign and Local Currency-denominated debt of the Federative Republic of Brazil to BBB (low) from BB (high) and changed the trends to Stable from Positive.



The reasons for the upgrade are a series of developments, both structural and policy-driven, that together strengthen credit quality. These are: (1) greater predictability of macroeconomic policies through a growing consensus across political parties in favor of an orthodox fiscal, monetary and exchange rate policy framework; (2) a structural strengthening of general government revenues from more efficient tax collection, greater availability of bank credit and formalization of the labor force; (3) improvement in the size and structure of public debt; and (4) a more-resilient external balance sheet due to Brazil’s net external creditor position, high and rising external liquidity, ongoing export diversification and robust foreign direct investment inflows which, together with oil and gas discoveries, brighten the investment outlook. “The Stable trend signals our expectations that the government will continue to implement a generally prudent macroeconomic policy framework following mid-term elections this October and presidential elections in 2010,” said Fergus McCormick, DBRS’s Brazil analyst.

The trend also incorporates the view that a more stable economy provides scope for further improvements in debt dynamics and a medium-term decline in average real interest rates. Combined with an operationally independent Central Bank that has adopted a pre-emptive monetary stance, Brazil’s position as a net exporter of food and fuels reduces inflation risk in the coming months. An important consideration in the decision to upgrade the ratings is DBRS’s belief that the sound macroeconomic policy framework outweighs a recent deterioration in the quality of public spending.

As Brazil has demonstrated since 1999, the public sector is committed to meeting its primary surplus targets while respecting the Central Bank’s mandate to tighten monetary policy in the presence of higher inflation pressures. In spite of high primary spending on wages, pensions and infrastructure investment, strong tax revenues provide the government with ample room to meet its primary targets. DBRS draws comfort from the fact that greater formal employment, combined with an expansion in credit has swollen the ranks of taxpayers. The cumulative effect of years of rising real wages and transfers from the Bolsa Família program appears to have improved social welfare, and to be partly responsible for higher tax receipts.



Earlier this year, DBRS called for more durable fiscal management and an adequate replacement to the loss of the CPMF financial transactions tax. In fact, the government announced it would plug the gap in the budget by cutting expenditures, raising the IOF financial operations tax, and accruing higher tax revenues as economic activity expanded. Since January, expenditure cuts have been slow to materialize. However, higher-than-expected tax receipts are sufficient to replace the lost revenue. Still, from a medium-term perspective, a range of structural distortions burdens public finances and the stability of the ratings will be a function of further progress in reducing these distortions. High tax rates and an uneven and complicated tax system curtail productivity growth and crowd out investment.



Approval of a pending nationwide value-added tax reform would help to correct many of these distortions and contain inflation expectations. Second, the public sector pension deficit will need to be reduced with additional reforms. Third, while in decline, public debt is high and interest payments on federal securities offset primary surpluses. One-quarter of federal debt matures within one year, leaving the government exposed to rollover risk and higher debt costs should lender confidence deteriorate.


Overall, DBRS expects that this and future governments will preserve a sound policy framework. However, policy reversals or an abandonment of the reform agenda could derail the trend of credit improvement.

http://www.dbrs.com/intnlweb/jsp/content/document.faces

5 comentários:

Seagull disse...

Even dont urderstanding english as well I would like to...

It seems really clear!

Thnaks Bank! ;-)

Anônimo disse...

http://www.financeone.com.br/noticia.php?lang=br&nid=20013

http://www.financeone.com.br/noticia.php?lang=br&nid=20013


2007


notícia arqueológica

Seagull disse...

Hummmm... acho que embora possam ser noticias parecidas, a data é de hj e não poderia ser mais atual.

Além do investment grade destes canadenses, a Petrobras também foi reclassificada.

Ou alguem acredita que esta virada do mercado aconteceu à tôa?

Mesmo com o óleo caindo, a Petro subir mais de 2% e o IBOVESPA 3%!!!???

Como falei, o dominio pleno do idioma ingles não é obrigatório aos brasileiros, mas ajuda...

Olha bem, que os textos são bem diferentes, além deste de junho/2007 estar traduzido! ;-)

^v^

wil123 disse...

nunca tinha ouvido falar desta agência de rating, DBRS.

Mas ela deve ser importante, afinal levou a bovespa a esta alta de 3%.
Ou tá todo mundo enganado,

achei que rating teria de ser feito por uma das três grandes para ser importante...

Unknown disse...

Anônimo...
Talvez o Google possa ajudar-lhe na tradução da noticia de ontem...
Arqueológica ? rsss

Embora não tenha nome muito conhecido, a DBRS é uma das mais influentes agências de crédito e de referência no mundo, segundo o analista de mercado da corretora Planner Ricardo Tadeu Martins.

Por isso, suas considerações devem ser observadas com atenção pelo investidor.

"O mercado recebeu a notícia do grau de investimento sem entusiasmo, a Bolsa, inclusive, chegou a esfriar um pouco, mas não deixa de ser um novo reconhecimento do trabalho que o governo vem fazendo para manter a economia estável", diz.

Segundo Martins, esse upgrade dá ao Brasil a possibilidade de mostrar às agências de risco Moody´s e Fitch (que ainda não concederam o grau de investimento ao Brasil) o quanto seus fundamentos econômicos estão sólidos e já têm condições de ganhar um novo prêmio.


A Moody´s disse que não pretende elevar tão já a nota de crédito do país, pois ainda quer avaliar melhor a relação dívida/PIB do Brasil."Acredito que o upgrade da Moody´s venha só no último trimestre", diz Martins.Já a Fitch sinalizou que se o Brasil ampliasse sua meta de superávit primário já seria um agilizador da nova nota."Como o governo tem sinalizado um aumento do superávit primário por conta do fundo soberano, não será estranho se na próxima semana a Fitch der o grau de investimento ao Brasil", afirma.