Brazil's central bank held its target rate unchanged at 15pc in its first meeting of 2026, citing an uncertain global environment due to US policies and their repercussions on global financial markets.
The decision to hold the rate, announced on Wednesday, follows a string of similar decisions since June 2025, when the central bank wrapped up a series of seven increases that raised the rate from a cyclical low of 10.5pc in September 2024, the central bank said.
Domestically, economic activity appears to be moderating while the labor market is showing signs of resilience. Headline and underlying measures continued to cool, but remain above the inflation target.
Brazil's headline inflation decelerated to an annual 4.26pc in December. Still, inflation expectations, as calculated by the bank's Focus survey, remain above target, at 4pc and 3.8pc for 2026 and 2027.
The policy committee continues to monitor the impacts of the geopolitical context on Brazilian inflation, as well as how evolving fiscal policy impacts monetary policy and financial assets.
Most financial market participants expect the central bank to hold at the first meeting of 2026 but project a 50 percentage point cut in March, bank BTG Pactual says.

