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Brazil's Copom cuts Selic to 14.25%, but raises its inflation forecast

Brazil's Copom cuts Selic to 14.25%, but raises its inflation forecast

A third straight quarter-point cut paired with a hawkish communiqué — election-year fiscal stimulus and El Niño flagged as upside risks

Leaders·Debt· easing Dinheiro de quem·A mudança silenciosa ·7 takes ·atualizado 24 de jun. de 2026

Summary

Banco Central Do Brasil's rate-setting [[Copom]] on 17 June 2026 voted unanimously to cut the benchmark Selic by 25 basis points to 14.25% — its third consecutive quarter-point cut — while striking a hawkish tone. May annual inflation ran at 4.72%, above the ceiling, and the bank raised its 2026 inflation projection to roughly 5.2% from 4.6%, flagging election-year fiscal stimulus and a likely El Niño as upside risks. Governor Gabriel Galipolo cited Middle East supply shocks. The easing arrives as Lula runs for a fourth term (see Lula leads Flávio Bolsonaro by double digits as the fourth-term campaign hardens) with the fiscal framework under scrutiny — a still-restrictive real rate even after the cut.

By the numbers

  • 14.25% — new Selic policy rate, down 25bp.
  • 3 — consecutive quarter-point cuts.
  • 4.72% — May annual IPCA inflation, above the ceiling.
  • ~5.2% — raised 2026 inflation forecast (from ~4.6%).

Why it matters

Brazil holds one of the world's highest real policy rates; the pace of cuts shapes credit, the real and the fiscal-debt path. A central bank easing while warning that the government's own election-year spending could reignite inflation exposes the tension between monetary and fiscal policy heading into the October vote.

What to watch

  • Whether the next Copom continues 25bp cuts or pauses on the raised forecast.
  • Monthly IPCA prints and any El Niño-driven food-price spike.
  • Fiscal-framework signals and election-year stimulus.