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Brazil's GDP growth slows to 2.2pc in 2Q

  • Market: Agriculture, Crude oil, Electricity, Metals, Natural gas, Oil products
  • 02/09/25

Brazil's GDP growth slowed to an annualized 2.2pc in the second quarter, the weakest in three years, as aggressive monetary tightening by the central bank reined in spending.

Growth in GDP decelerated from 2.9pc in the previous quarter and from 3.6pc in the last quarter of 2024, according to government statistics agency IBGE. Brazil's central bank increased the target interest rate to 14.75pc in May, resulting in 4.5 percentage points of hiking since September 2024 to counter rising inflation and shore up the real currency.

Household consumption grew by an annual 1.8pc in the second quarter, slowing from 2.6pc growth in the previous quarter, while government spending slowed to a 0.4pc growth from 1.1pc growth in the first quarter of 2025.

The agriculture sector grew by an annual 10.1pc in the second quarter, slightly lower than 10.2pc growth in the previous quarter. The sector's performance was led by good crop performance, especially from corn, soy, cotton and coffee crops, IBGE said.

The industrial sector grew by an annual 1.1pc, slowing down from a 2.4pc rise in the previous quarter. Manufacturing remained stable as the growth from some segments of the industry — such as steelmaking, machinery and chemicals — offset contractions in vehicle manufacturing, IBGE said.

The oil, natural gas and mining industries grew by 8.7pc, jumping from a 0.2pc growth in the first quarter of 2025. The sector's gain was led by increased oil and gas output, IBGE said. Meanwhile, construction slowed to eke out just 0.2pc growth from a 3.4pc gain in the previous quarter.

Electricity and gas, water and sewage management contracted by 4pc in the second quarter, following a 1.6pc growth in the previous quarter. The sector's performance was led by several increases in power rates as Brazil entered a dry weather season in the second quarter, which reduced power demand, IBGE said.

Exports rose by 2pc from a 1.2pc gain in the first quarter, while imports slowed to an annual 4.4pc gain from a 14pc gain in the previous quarter. Brazil exported more vehicles, crude and machinery, while the country's imports were led by chemicals, machinery and equipments, IBGE said.

Gross fixed capital formation — which measures how much companies increased their capital goods — decelerated to an annual 4.1pc in the second quarter from a 9.1pc growth in the previous quarter.

Brazil's economy totaled R3.2 trillion ($588bn) in the second quarter of 2025, the highest value since the beginning of the historical series in 1996.


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