Economy June 16, 2026 09:09 AM

Brazil's Central Bank Set to Trim Selic by 25 Basis Points at June Meeting

Poll shows third straight cut to 14.25% amid rising inflation and cautious messaging from policymakers

By Avery Klein
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A broad economist poll indicates Brazil's monetary policy committee is poised to lower the Selic rate by 25 basis points at its upcoming meeting, marking a third consecutive reduction as inflation edges higher. While most respondents expect further gradual easing, concerns about inflation persistence and shifting expectations temper forecasts for the pace of future cuts.

Brazil's Central Bank Set to Trim Selic by 25 Basis Points at June Meeting
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Key Points

  • A poll of 45 economists conducted between June 12 and June 15 showed 41 expect a 25-basis-point Selic cut at the upcoming Copom meeting, with four forecasting no change.
  • Copom began easing in March after holding the policy rate at 15% through the second half of 2025; the expected cut would bring the Selic to 14.25%.
  • Median poll forecasts put the Selic at 13.75% at the end of 2026 and 12.00% at the end of 2027, signaling a gradual downward path for policy rates that will influence fixed-income, banking and currency markets.

Brazil's central bank is widely expected to approve a third consecutive 25-basis-point reduction in its policy rate at its meeting on Wednesday, according to a recent poll of economists conducted between June 12 and June 15. The anticipated move would lower the Selic rate to 14.25% from 14.50%.

Forty-one of the 45 economists surveyed forecast a quarter-point reduction at the meeting; four respondents anticipated no change. The monetary policy committee, known as Copom, initiated a measured easing cycle in March after maintaining the cost of borrowing at 15% through the second half of 2025.

Market participants and analysts expect the committee to keep a cautious tone in its post-meeting statement, reflecting ongoing pressures on consumer prices. Joao Savignon, head of macroeconomic research at Kinitro Capital, noted that Copom's communications between meetings point to a continuation of rate reductions at a similar pace, while adding that the overall planning of the cycle has become more uncertain.

Annual inflation in Brazil rose to 4.72% in May from 4.39% in April, moving further above the central bank's target of 3.0% with a tolerance band of 1.5 percentage points in either direction. Analysts highlighted that an El Nino weather pattern represents an additional potential risk to inflation dynamics, according to a report by BTG Pactual economists.

"When we consider some additional unanchoring of expectations ... the scope for interest rate cuts this year becomes virtually nil," the BTG Pactual economists wrote.

On forward guidance, most poll respondents also signaled expectations for continued, measured reductions. Of the 31 economists who answered an additional question on the committee's subsequent move, 19 predicted another 25-basis-point cut at the August meeting.

Median projections from the poll's quarterly forecasts indicate the Selic would finish 2026 at 13.75% and end 2027 at 12.00%. Those median estimates align closely with consensus readings from economists surveyed in a separate weekly central bank poll.

Analysts warn that Copom is likely to balance an easing path against inflationary pressures, repeating cautious language in communications while unwinding borrowing costs that were close to two-decade highs just months earlier. The central bank's approach reflects a gradual recalibration rather than an aggressive pivot.


What this means for markets and the economy

  • Fixed-income markets and sovereign yield curves will be sensitive to the committee's forward guidance on the pace of future cuts.
  • Currency and banking sectors are likely to react to both the immediate cut and the medium-term forecast path for the Selic rate.
  • Persistent inflation and weather-related agricultural impacts tied to El Nino could influence pricing across consumer and commodity-sensitive sectors.

Risks

  • Inflation pressures remain elevated - annual inflation rose to 4.72% in May from 4.39% in April - posing a risk to the pace of further rate cuts and affecting consumer-facing sectors.
  • El Nino represents an additional potential concern for inflation, particularly through agricultural and commodity channels that could feed into consumer prices.
  • Any unanchoring of inflation expectations could severely limit the scope for further interest rate reductions this year, increasing uncertainty for bond and currency markets.

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