Brazil's Uncertain Market Outlook

 | Jun 14, 2018 04:06PM ET

The Brazilian stock market has been hammered in the last few months. In US dollar terms, it’s one of the worst performing emerging markets so far this year.

Even now, Brazilian stocks don’t look cheap. Investors appear to have finally woken up to the uncertain outcome of presidential elections later in the year.

A number of years back, I remember walking down a street in Buenos Aires, where I live. I was with an Argentine and we were following a well-dressed Brazilian couple.

That was eight years ago, in 2010. I can pinpoint the time because it was during a previous football / soccer world cup, which are held every four years. The current one just started in Russia. The last one was hosted by Brazil, so no self-respecting Brazilian would have gone on holiday to the rival, neighbour country at the time. So this must have been during the one before, which was hosted by South Africa.

The Brazilian currency, the real, had already recovered from the losses suffered during the global financial crisis. One US dollar bought around 1.6 reais, and foreign travel was relatively cheap for Brazilians.

I commented to my Argentine companion how I’d noticed a great number of Brazilian tourists in Buenos Aires. “Yeah, enjoy it while it lasts” she growled in the direction of the well-dressed couple. Decades of economic ups and downs, in both Brazil and Argentina, mean few people expect the good times to last in either country.

Dialling forward eight years, it now takes 3.7 reais to buy one US dollar. That’s a devaluation of 57%, equivalent to losing 10% a year in between (at a compound rate). Unsurprisingly, Brazilian tourists seem thinner on the ground these days. Instead, you’re much more likely to encounter Venezuelans seeking refuge from the hyperinflationary meltdown of their country.