What Does Brazil's Election Mean For The Global Economy? Some Key Takeaways

 | Nov 01, 2022 04:15

  • The return of left-wing Lula to Brazil's highest post completes a regional political pivot started in Mexico in 2018
  • Lula said his country, the world's third-largest food exporter is "not interested in the role of commodity exporter"
  • However, Brazil has undertaken a growing role in supplying the world's food in the face of the war in Ukraine—and has largely benefited
  • In Brazil's tightest run-off election ever, former left-wing president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva returned to power after 13 years after securing 50.8% of the country's valid votes yesterday. It will be his third, non-consecutive mandate after 13 years out of office. Jair Bolsonaro is Brazil's first democratically elected president not to win a second term and is yet to concede defeat publicly.

    In his victory speech last night at a hotel in the country's largest city, Sao Paulo, the 76-year-old Lula talked about reuniting a highly divided country, saying that "there's only one Brazil," a feat that appears unlikely given that Lula will face fierce opposition in the congress, senate and states.   

    Brazil's political pivot is the latest and most significant in Latin America in the last few years. It completes a broad regional shift to left-wing nationalism that has overtaken Latin America by storm since Andrés Manuel López Obrador first took office as the president of Mexico in late 2018.  

    While it remains early to assess the full implications of Lula's election, here are a few immediate takeaways relevant to the global economy.

    h2 Food Commodities/h2

    Brazil is currently the third-largest food producer in the world. It recently displaced the U.S. as the world's leading beef exporter and remains the greatest exporter of coffee and soybeans.

    With tight global grain supplies due to the war in Ukraine, record drought in Europe and unusual rains in India and China, the South American country has emerged as one of the world's leading short-term solutions to the growing food-security problem.

    However, in his speech last night, Lula said Brazil is "not interested in the role of commodity exporter." In turn, he vowed to prioritize small and medium rural producers, given that they provide the bulk of his country's internal food supplies.

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    The statement indicates a pivot from Bolsonaro's export-focused agricultural policy, which led to two years of record commodity exports for the country on the back of rising global prices.

    A change in Brazilian agricultural policy would likely be a headwind to the world's food supplies, possibly resulting in higher market and consumer prices.

    Unlike the U.S., Europe and China—which have already reached peak farmland—Brazil has been growing its arable area exponentially during Bolsonaro's government. This, in turn, led to environmental concerns, especially regarding the deforestation of the Amazon region.

    As the president and CEO of Chicago-based AgResource, Dan Basse, said in an interview: "We estimate that the world needs to bring another 25 million acres of cropland in the next five years to balance things out. Most of that land will have to come from South America."

    h2 Petrobras /h2

    While Lula did not mention anything specific about state-run corporate giants, like Petroleo Brasileiro Petrobras (NYSE:PBR) or Eletrobras (BVMF:LIPR3), the country's oil and electricity businesses, his political trajectory indicates the government will likely pursue a greater decision power in these companies.

    During his former government, the president controlled the country's inflation through price-cap policies in both companies, overextending their balance sheets and leading to mediocre stock gains in the long run.

    Furthermore, a major corruption scandal that engulfed the governments of both Lula and his successor, Dilma Rousseff, helped drag Petrobras to new lows.

    That panorama began to change during Michel Temer's presidency in 2016, when the former president stated the company was to sell its immense crude oil production at prices on par with the U.S. WTI benchmark.

    The liberalization of the company deepened with Bolsonaro, marked by a significant decrease in governmental ownership of ordinary stocks and the sale of many oil-exploration licenses to private foreign and Brazilian-based companies.

    During that period, the company improved its operating margins and raised cash reserves, which led to a gain of roughly 130% for the stock. Petrobras also ballooned its dividend yield to nearly 35%.