Turmoil In Brazil: Millions Protest As Head Of Central Bank Quits

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Brazil in turmoil as millions take to the streets

The Head of the Central Bank in Brazil, Alexandre Tombini, has said that he may resign just days after millions of protestors took to the streets of Sao Paulo demanding that President Dilma Rousseff resigns. 

Rousseff faced an impeachment bid following allegations that she defrauded the fiscal books in 2014, but rather than step down she promoted former disgraced President Luiz  Inácio Lula da Silva to a ministry position – angering millions of Brazilian citizens.

Zerohedge.com reports:

In his new position, he plans to revive the flagging economy with what the market assumes will be a series of leftist policies. That explains why the BRL retraced all of the gains it posted when Lula was first detained.

Of course Lula himself denies that he would pursue policies that may harm the country’s fiscal position. According to Valor, Lula’s plans wouldn’t include a shift to the left. Nor would they include expanding credit. Or rate cuts. Or tapping Brazil’s FX reserves. Or social security reform. In short, it isn’t exactly clear what they would include but whatever the case, “investors see risk of government resorting to an economic policy shift in a last-ditch attempt to save President Rousseff’s mandate,” Luciano Rostagno, chief strategist at Banco Mizuho do Brasil told Bloomberg in a phone interview.

And it’s not just investors that are unnerved.

BCB President Alexandre Tombini is reportedly “giving signs” that he may resign. “The possible nomination of Lula points to deep economic policy changes, with repercussions in monetary policy and FX policy,” Valor reported on Wednesday, explaining Tombini’s reservations about Lula’s new post. The BCB chief worries Lula may tap FX reserves and put pressure on Tombini to cut rates, Valor continues, without citing sources.

Apparently, Lula has already moved to replace him. According to Veja,”Lula has invited Henrique Meirelles to assume the central bank chief post.

Needless to say, this is all weighing heavily on the BRL:

Brazil's BRL

Meanwhile, Senator Delcídio do Amaral – whose arrest in November unnerved markets and suggested sitting lawmakers are not in fact immune from investigation –  copped a plea-bargain and gave testimony which indicates that Rousseff knew of and tried to cover up bribery at Petrobras.

“According to the plea documents released Tuesday, Ms. Rousseff was aware of all the details of the 2006 purchase of an oil refinery in Pasadena, Texas. Prosecutors suspect Petrobras used the refinery deal to generate funds it allegedly used to pay for millions of dollars of bribes and personally benefit some Petrobras executives, according to the documents,” WSJ recounts, adding that “Mr. do Amaral also alleged Ms. Rousseff pressured Justice Minister José Eduardo Cardozo to free jailed suspects caught up in the graft probe, according to the documents. Mr. Cardozo left his post in late February, saying he was weary of ‘political and personal pressure,’ without being more specific.”

Amaral also says Rousseff’s former chief of staff and current Education Minister, Aloizio Mercadante tried to pay for his silence, allegations which Brazilian weekly Veja says it can prove via tape recordings. Lula is also implicated in the testimony.

According to the latest, Lula is set to become Rousseff’s Chief of Staff.

As you can see, this is a veritable circus. Throw in the fact that Lower House Speaker Eduardo Cuhna, the ringleader of the bid to impeach Rousseff, is himself facing impeachment for hiding Swiss bank accounts, and you have a political dynamic that is just about as poisonous as one could possibly imagine.

We wish Brazil’s beleaguered populace the best of luck in tossing the whole lot of them, because unless and until someone cleans house, the economic malaise is going to continue and the BRL will never have any lasting respite.

But not everyone is worried…

3 Comments

  1. Brasil has a long history of this sort of thing. It is in the culture. I lived in Recife for two years and while getting the paperwork needed to marry a Brazilian woman, I had to get cleared by the local police. I was informed by the clerk that it would take two weeks. My fiance suggested I give him a “tip”. So I did, and viola, the paperwork needed was done in a minute. This is how it is throughout South America. But, wrt politicians at high levels, the “tips” are much larger. Of course, we have the same exact thing here in the U$A and it’s more damaging as the whole world is affected.

  2. Brasil has a long history of this sort of thing. It is in the culture. I lived in Recife for two years and while getting the paperwork needed to marry a Brazilian woman, I had to get cleared by the local police. I was informed by the clerk that it would take two weeks. My fiance suggested I give him a “tip”. So I did, and viola, the paperwork needed was done in a minute. This is how it is throughout South America. But, wrt politicians at high levels, the “tips” are much larger. Of course, we have the same exact thing here in the U$A and it’s more damaging as the whole world is affected.

  3. The entire south Americas ha e en a disaster since rbe Spanish catholic conquistadors showed ip with their greedy thieving murdering g eyes .And it’ just keeps getting worse .Youd think the people would wake up but their diet of dead cows makes their bowels sluggish and so their brains arent the best.That and centuries of brainwashing corruption inequality crime and cocaine .

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