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Strategies & Market Trends : Telebras (TBH) & Brazil -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: wl9839 who wrote (15303)5/14/1999 4:49:00 PM
From: wl9839  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22640
 
Brazil's Economy Showing Resilience, Report Says
(New York Times)
By SIMON ROMERO

SAO PAULO, Brazil -- The Brazilian economy defied pessimistic forecasts
of stagnation in the first quarter and actually registered some growth,
the government said Thursday in a report that showed Brazil's surprising
resilience to the effects of the currency crisis that erupted in
January.

The gross domestic product, the broadest measure of economic
performance, grew by 1 percent in the first three months of the year
compared with the last quarter of 1998. Agricultural production rose 18
percent, leading the expansion.

Brazil is the world's largest coffee producer, and the second-largest
producer of soybeans after the United States. The weaker currency may
have even contributed to the economy's growth by encouraging farmers to
increase output of these and other products since their prices became
more competitive abroad.

"There was an immediate reaction throughout the entire chain of our
production following the devaluation," said Nathan Herszkowicz,
president of Brazil's coffee industry union. According to the
organization, coffee exports more than doubled in the first quarter of
1999 compared with the period a year earlier.

Although higher agricultural output contrasted with weak industrial
production, the government figures released Thursday suggest that
Brazil's economy is recovering more quickly than thought.

While some analysts earlier this year forecast the economy to shrink as
much as 6 percent, most economists are now predicting a contraction of
only 1 percent to 2 percent. Optimism has been stoked by six
interest-rate cuts over the last seven weeks. On Wednesday, the central
bank reduced its main lending rate to 27 percent from 29.5 percent, the
lowest level in nine months.

"Interest rates coming down, coupled with controlled inflation, have had
a tremendous impact," said Winston Fritsch, president of the Brazilian
unit of the investment bank Dresdner Kleinwort Benson. Progress made by
the government in reducing the budget deficit is likely to allow the
central bank to continue lowering rates to below 20 percent by the end
of this year, Fritsch added.

Brazilian stocks rallied on the growth figures, with the benchmark
Bovespa index here rising 2.56 percent. Increasing foreign investment in
Brazilian equities together with greater optimism among domestic
investors have pushed the index up 83 percent in local-currency terms
and 34 percent in dollar terms so far this year.

The better-than-expected growth figures and buoyant stock market
contrast sharply with other indicators that show an economy struggling
with its worst crisis since a stabilization program was carried out in
1994. The plunge in January in the value of the currency deeply hurt
Brazil's financial credibility and borrowing power abroad, which
reverberated through the economy with slumping sales, bankruptcies and
layoffs. Manufacturers and construction companies were the hardest hit.

An example of the economy's strains was seen this week when 50,000
unemployed workers lined up outside municipal buildings to compete for
10,000 openings for street cleaning jobs in the city of Sao Paulo. The
salary for the temporary, six-month work is 136 reais a month, or $82,
Brazil's official minimum wage. Unemployment here in Sao Paulo, the
country's wealthiest city, is at a record level of nearly 20 percent.

Brazilian companies have started to shift toward increasing their
exports, partly because domestic demand has remained stagnant. A large
food processor, Perdigao SA, exported 18 percent more in the first
quarter after the devaluation in January. "In dollar terms, we have the
cheapest chickens in the world right now," said Wang Wei Chang, chief
financial officer of Perdigao.

Still, the opportunities for companies such as Perdigao to fuel a
stronger recovery are limited since domestic borrowing rates remain
punitively high and foreign credit markets are still largely shunning
Brazilian borrowers. With deeper cuts in interest rates largely
dependent on the government's success in narrowing the budget deficit,
companies are anxiously awaiting fresh evidence of spending cuts from
the capital, Brasilia. "Now is not the time to relax, not even a
little," Wang of Perdigao said. "We need to see the government deliver."