Posts

Overall figures were not disappointing, but slowdown and interest rates are a concern

11/23/2022


Emy Shayo Cherman — Foto: Ana Paula Paiva/Valor

Emy Shayo Cherman — Foto: Ana Paula Paiva/Valor

Brazilian public companies reported good results in the third quarter, supported by the country’s better-than-expected economic activity in the period. However, the persistence of inflation and uncertainty about the interest rates are raising the risk of deceleration in the following months.

According to an analysis carried out by Valor Data with 408 public non-financial companies, excluding the effects of Petrobras and Vale to avoid distorting the sample, net profit fell by 31% year-over-year and increased 15% over the second quarter. Revenues advanced 15% in one year, to R$931.2 billion, and grew 5% over June.

Production costs, although lower when compared to the second quarter – with the reflection of the invasion of Ukraine by Russia – are still at high levels. The 21% increase was greater than the advance in revenue and ate into profits.

“Overall, our perception of the results was positive, better than expected,” said Emy Shayo Cherman, Latin America and Brazil equity strategist at J.P. Morgan. She said the market had low expectations, but GDP growth projected for the third quarter, compared with initial estimates of contraction, helped results to overcome projections.

The main positive highlights were the oil and gas and pulp and paper sectors. “Petrobras reported revenues above the consensus, even with Brent prices below the previous quarter,” said Victor Penna, manager of the market analysis team at BB Investimentos. For him, the sector will be strong in the fourth quarter, since demand and supply remain tight, which would be enough to hold oil prices up.

The market now monitors the controversy surrounding the payment of dividends by Petrobras. In the earnings conference call, the chief financial and investor relations officer, Rodrigo Araújo Alves, said the company’s cash is close to the optimal point of $8 billion and that debt is “stable, controlled” around $65 billion.

Most sectors posted mixed results in the third quarter, said XP’s strategist Jennie Li. “We didn’t see any where all companies had positive or negative results, it depended a lot on the circumstances they were in.”

Construction companies reported results above the expected by the market, while the greater devaluation of iron ore and steel, driven by China, pressured the results of Vale and steelmakers.

Ms. Shayo, with J.P. Morgan, noted that the improved activity of the Brazilian economy impacted mainly services, with disappointing consumer spending figures, as shown by the results of retailers. “Expectations were unrealistic and there was an overestimation by the market.” She recalled that discretionary consumption was especially impacted by the corrosion of the population’s income.

The higher interest rates, still with virtually no effect on the overall sample, have done considerable damage to the balance sheets of consumer companies, as evidenced by the comments of executives and the alarming numbers on the bottom line – the rise in interest rates increases the cost of debt, which is higher because companies have capitalized in recent years.

But that’s not all. The deleterious effect of interest rates also appears in sales. The high default rate has hurt the results of retailers such as Americanas, Magazine Luiza, and Via. The chief financial and investor relations officer of Magazine Luiza, Roberto Bellissimo, said in the earnings conference call that the company is issuing fewer cards as a way to face this situation.

The worsening of the financial result of Americanas, which was negative by R$612.3 million, more than doubled compared to the negative result of the third quarter 2021. The company links the bad figures to the high interest rates in the period, which led to the net loss of R$211.5 million, and to the 19.6% drop in sales of electronics, because they are products of higher average ticket that depend on credit.

In the case of Grupo Pão de Açúcar (GPA), many stores managed to partially pass on inflation to prices, but in regions where competition is fiercer, especially with the Extra brand in the suburbs of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, this is harder to do, CEO Marcelo Pimentel told analysts in the earnings conference call. The investments related to the quality of fruits and vegetables had an initial impact, but the group could not pass on direct inflation to these prices.

“If fiscal and political uncertainties remain in place, the Central Bank may have to raise interest rates again, which will put further pressure on companies’ bottom lines,” said Ms. Li. She notes that large publicly traded companies still have ways to protect margins by being more resilient, which reduces liquidity risks.

“This increase [in financial costs] is problematic for the company when it is not capitalized and is burning cash,” said Victor Natal, Itaú BBA’s strategist for individual clients. He points out that it is natural for companies’ financial expenses to increase and that they are used to this amid Brazil’s history of high interest rates. “I believe we have already been through the worst in relation to this,” he said.

For the fourth quarter, the banks believe there will be a slowdown, even with the period being the best for consumer companies, which usually rely on Black Friday and the holiday season. “Sales are likely to increase compared to the third quarter, but they will still be weak year-over-year,” said Mr. Natal, with Itaú BBA.

In the view of Mr. Penna, with BB Investimentos, the atypical fourth quarter, with the FIFA World Cup, is likely to boost consumption figures, especially of beverages. “Ambev may benefit in the ‘away-from-home’ segment, with increased consumption in bars and restaurants,” he said. “The purchasing power of consumers is a point to keep an eye on.”

*By Felipe Laurence, Victoria Netto — São Paulo

Source: Valor International

https://valorinternational.globo.com/

Dynamism can help Brazil navigate almost unscathed through the stormy crisis raging abroad, economist says

10/31/2022


Alexandre de Ázara — Foto: Silvia Zamboni/Valor

Alexandre de Ázara — Foto: Silvia Zamboni/Valor

The dynamism of Brazil’s spending has helped create a stronger economy in Brazil. With an investment rate comparable to the best periods of the Workers’ Party (PT) administrations, the country has a potential growth – without generating inflation – of 2.5% in the coming years, said Alexandre de Ázara, the chief economist of UBS BB.

The confidence in this accelerating effect of investment on the Brazilian economy shapes the bank’s optimistic view about the country’s macroeconomic scenario. UBS BB was among the first to bet on stronger growth and lower inflation in 2022. The scenario for 2023 is the same. Mr. Ázara foresees 1.4% growth next year and put Brazil’s official inflation index IPCA at 4%. The medians of the Central Bank’s Focus survey with economists are, respectively, 0.6% and 4.9%.

Such dynamism can help Brazil navigate almost unscathed through the stormy crisis raging abroad, the economist said. In a world very concerned about inflation in the United States and the slowdown in China, “Brazil became the darling, but in a relative ‘ugly contest’.”

However, it is key to know from the winner of the presidential election what the fiscal policy will look like. “If a proposal comes out to take items out of the spending cap and a R$200 billion waiver, I think the reaction will be very negative.”

Read below the main excerpts from the interview:

Valor: What supports UBS’s more optimistic view on Brazil’s economy?

Alexandre de Ázara: At the worst moment in 2020, we projected that GDP would contract 6% to 7%, and the most pessimistic analysts were talking about 10%. In 2021, we expected growth close to 2%, it ended up at 4.6%. For this year, we started with something between zero and 0.5%, and it will end up close to 3%. In other words, for three years now, we, the economists, have been consistently underestimating Brazil’s GDP growth. I wanted to make this introduction to answer the question. I looked at the longer-term perspective, breaking down factors of production by capital, labor and productivity. We know that productivity growth was very high during the Lula administration. Between 2003 and 2013, it was 1% and 2% all the time, but it collapsed during the Rousseff administration and never recovered. My longer-term reading is that this increase in productivity, which made us imagine potential GDP at 4% or even 5%, was the effect of the creation of the credit market in Brazil. Until 2003, companies were not able to get a loan running for more than a year. Only the big ones could. Apart from that, we had the demographic dividend [when an economy grows as a result of a change in the age structure of its population], which peaked at that time. In 2014 and 2015, the economic policy led Brazil into a crippling recession, of 7%. There was then an uncoordinated but common economic policy response of classifying the country’s capital stock as excessive. And the only way to destroy excessive capital, without war or natural disaster, is to have depreciation. Then in 2014 the investment rate fell to close to 10% of GDP, which did not change despite the lower interest rates. One theory to explain that is that the interest rate had lost the power to drive investment. The other theory, which I like better, is that the power is the same, but there was a much higher capital stock than desired. It is difficult to demonstrate this in practice, but I can use this as a backdrop for my scenario. The economic recovery from the second half of 2016 onward brought a 1.7% GDP growth. Why wasn’t it higher? Because the capital stock was still excessive. But at some point between 2018 and 2019 that process must have ended. Then the pandemic hit and we could not realize that.

Valor: Does investment made GDP growth surprise to the upside?

Mr. Ázara: After breaking down GDP growth by consumption, investment, and government spending, the only component of GDP that is above pre-pandemic levels is investment, and by a lot. Investment is now close to 18% of GDP. This is the highest investment rate in Brazil since 2010, when the Economist magazine made that cover with Christ the Redeemer taking off. This increase in the ratio of investment to GDP, and also a higher-quality investment, has a very important accelerating effect, and that is why GDP has been surprising to the upside for two years now. This was not clear to anyone. Economists look at these numbers often because they don’t change all the time, but they tell a compelling story. That is why we have 1.4% GDP [projection] for next year. Another thing is that in order to calculate GDP in the short term, one thing many do is use data from China as a kind of proxy for world trade. Before the lockdowns [because of the zero-Covid policy], that proxy served well. That has changed. A lockdown in Macau, China, causes a contraction of demand and supply of services in that country that doesn’t necessarily impact the world in the same way.

Valor: But shouldn’t this investment rate fall with the rise in the Selic rate?

Mr. Ázara: There was a prevailing view that if interest rates went up, the investment would slow down, but this didn’t happen. Investment grew in this period only because a high rate of return was expected, and this only occurs because productivity will be good. And there is no public spending, this is the beauty of it, the greatest proof that we don’t need public spending to grow. [Former President] Dilma Roussef’s economic policy [2011-2016] focused on public spending, and I understand that she had the best of intentions, but it doesn’t work. The GDP fell by 7% and unemployment increased, creating uncertainty for families.

Valor: You are also more optimistic about inflation.

Mr. Ázara: I am more optimistic about inflation next year. There is a relative price of goods to be adjusted because of the normalization of world supply. It is not a permanent move, but it is likely to help to smooth out dynamics in the next 12 months. That is why I have a more optimistic projection than the market for this. My projection for services inflation, on the other hand, is closer to the consensus.

Valor: What is the potential GDP projection UBS works with for Brazil?

Mr. Ázara: We think the country can grow close to 2.5% in the next two or three years. For the long term, however, this number is closer to 2%. In order to improve, we have to make structural reforms that I don’t think either of the two candidates in the runoff vote will be able to do.

Valor: And what are these reforms?

Mr. Ázara: To grow above 2% a year, there is a list. But I think two are more important. The first is a new pension reform. Brazil still has very privileged civil servants. The rules that apply to them do not apply to the private sector. The second is to make a tax overhaul together with a spending overhaul, and a fiscal overhaul. This is my vision. If this is done, I think Brazil can grow by 3%, maybe even 4% a year.

Valor: You don’t believe in relevant reforms in either scenario?

Mr. Ázara: The taxation of dividends is the only measure likely to pass. Discussion in Congress is ripe, it is likely to be voted on. I think it is the only one. There is, in fact, an asymmetry, where business entities don’t pay taxes. Journalists, the financial market, lawyers, and engineers are the ones who most fit into these special tax situations. I worked for years in asset management and did not pay income tax because I received everything as dividends. I think it is a fair discussion.

Valor: Tax collection has been surprising along with economic activity, and has given the government room to maneuver. Can this situation persist in 2023?

Mr. Ázara: I believe so. We need, obviously, that the initial fiscal conditions are not bad. The winner of the runoff vote will have to ask for a fiscal waiver for next year’s target. If it is something north of R$100 billion, I think we will start off on the wrong foot. I like the idea of starting with R$50 billion, leaving more R$50 billion contingent on the approval of a new fiscal rule. But if this new rule keeps things out of the spending cap as if there was no limit, the market will misread it. It has to be a consistent rule that embraces everything: it can have some flexibility, and it can allow some additional spending contingent to the level of debt/GDP – if debt drops, for example, the government can spend more. This discussion is likely to last for the first six months of the administration.

Valor: To what extent can this more pessimistic scenario for the economy abroad affect Brazil?

Mr. Ázara: I was this month at the meeting of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the consensus is that Brazil has become the darling but in a relative “ugly contest.” The world is very concerned about a recession caused, mainly, by an excessive monetary tightening in the United States and a slowdown in China. The main reason Brazil suffers less is that Brazil always suffers less because it is a large and closed economy. We only export 10% of what we produce, we only import 10%. Besides this, the percentage of debt in the hands of foreigners is at a historic low, and the Central Bank, starting the year with fiscal and elections challenges, normalized the monetary policy earlier. Another question is whether the risk premium on the fiscal policy dominates the external risk.

Valor: Doesn’t growth fueled by the services sector, while industry and retail are falling, signal a worse quality GDP?

Mr. Ázara: I believe not. We spent a long time with a greater demand for goods. It was reasonable to have this adjustment. I don’t think it means a forecast of worse growth ahead. Investment is a very positive story. It is what rules the rest. Everybody is a little concerned and thinks that the situation is bad, but is investing. The general perception is worse than the sectorial situation, specific to each company. I believe that investment can be maintained for a while longer, contingent upon responsible fiscal choices. If it is irresponsible, it will fall to 10%, the same as it was during the Dilma Rousseff period. It has nothing to do with the ruler, but his choices will determine this.

*By Marcelo Osakabe — São Paulo

Source: valor International

https://valorinternational.globo.com/