As we kick off the new year, there is perhaps no more tragic economic story than that of Brazil.
Once an EM darling, Latin America’s largest economy fell off the deep end in 2015 as a perfect storm of falling commodity prices, depressed demand from China, a soaring dollar, a devalued yuan, and an intractable political crisis plunged the country into what even the sellside has begun to acknowledge is an outright depression.
Inflation is running in the double digits and the country is facing an unemployment crisis which is bad news for an economy in which consumers have levered up in recent years to finance a middle class lifestyle.
Meanwhile, President Dilma Rousseff is battling for her political life as House Speaker Eduardo Cunha presses ahead with an impeachment bid even as he faces his own set of problems tied to the Car Wash investigation. Finance Minister Joaquim Levy was shown the door after political gridlock left him unable to implement much needed austerity measures. The market is concerned that his replacement, Nelson Barbosa, is less inclined to fiscal responsibility despite his best efforts to convince investors and ratings agencies otherwise.
In short, everything that could go wrong in 2015 did go wrong - and then some.
Things aren’t looking too good for 2016 either, a year in which Rio is set to host the summer Olympics. “Brazil’s economy will contract more than previously forecast and is heading for the deepest recession since at least 1901 as economic activity and confidence sink amid a political crisis, a survey of analysts showed,” Bloomberg writes, adding that “Latin America’s largest economy will shrink 2.95 percent this year, according to the weekly central bank poll of about 100 economists, versus a prior estimate of a 2.81 percent contraction.”
The analysts, Bloomberg continues, “lowered their 2016 growth forecast for 13 straight weeks and estimate the economy contracted 3.71 percent last year.”
Have a look at the following chart which depicts the median market expectation for 2016 GDP. As you can see, analysts were continually forced to reassess the situation as conditions continued to deteriorate throughtout the year. Needless to say, this is one scenario where the "trend" is most assuredly not anyone's "friend."
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Bonus: the full Brazil GDP chart treatment courtesy of Credit Suisse