A Perfect Storm for Brazil: When Will It Be a Buy?

 | Mar 24, 2015 05:28AM ET

Everything that can go wrong, seemingly is going wrong in South America’s former powerhouse economy. The government is engulfed in a scandal that’s hammering the country’s biggest company, threatening capital expenditures and investment economy-wide. Mainstay commodity exports are experiencing severe price and demand declines. Inflation is high, and the central bank is tightening, which is dampening growth; the consumer sector, formerly an engine of growth, is hurting badly and heavily indebted. The country is being ravaged by drought, and the electorate is angry. A contrarian might ask: “When will there be an opportunity to invest?” We say, not yet -- and for the bold, there still may be an opportunity to short the Brazilian market and currency.

Murphy’s Law is playing out in spades in Brazil -- everything that can go wrong seems to be going wrong at the same time. And it shows in the country’s stock market; the most liquid U.S. ETF giving exposure to the Brazilian market is down nearly 45 percent from its recent high at the beginning of September (Brazil’s currency has fallen 23 percent since the beginning of the year).

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So what are the woes afflicting Brazil?

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First, the acute problem that’s front and center in the news: the bribery and kickback scandal engulfing the ruling Workers’ Party. Prosecutors allege that nearly $1 billion was diverted from state oil company Petroleo (NYSE:PBR) over a period of several years in the mid-2000s, and 34 sitting politicians are being investigated. Brazil’s current President, Dilma Roussef, was chairman during much of this period. She’s not being investigated, but mass demonstrations are calling for her impeachment.

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The implications of this impending political disaster are legion. First, PBR is a titan of the Brazilian economy; it accounted for 12 percent of Brazilian fixed capital investment in 2013, and that capex is already slated to decline dramatically, both because of the current environment in the global oil market, and because PBR’s debt has been downgraded to junk status. A 20 percent decline in capex by PBR, analysts believe, would cut almost a percent off Brazil’s GDP growth. The effects may continue to ripple out from PBR to the construction firms and others with whom it contracts, who are also likely to see debt downgrades.

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Second, Brazil is front and center in the collapse of global commodity prices that has accompanied the strengthening of the US Dollar Index over the last months. Brazil’s past decade of growth depended heavily on Chinese demand for two commodities in particular, soybeans and iron ore. The slackening of that demand is being driven by several powerful macro forces: increased Chinese capacity, the appreciation of the U.S. Dollar, and the ongoing transformation of the Chinese economy. Analysts have long commented on this trend -- but converging indicators (including the flatlining of global carbon emissions mentioned above) suggest that it is finally and decisively underway. Bad news for commodity exporters -- especially Brazil.

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Third, both of the problems mentioned above are happening in a context of economic weakening. With inflation running at 7.14 percent by the most recent readings, the central bank has raised rates to 12.75 percent, a six-year high, and rates are expected to climb further this year. This tightening will likely depress GDP growth, which will lead to higher unemployment and depressed tax revenues. Combined with Brazil’s other woes -- including especially the PBR troubles discussed above -- these conditions may well induce foreign capital to flee, resulting in a feedback loop of lower growth and worsening performance.

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iShares Brazil Index (ARCA:EWZ)

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