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July public sector fiscal data came worse than consensus, with a notable negative surprise in the nominal result. The nominal deficit reached BRL 175.6 billion, above the market expectation of BRL 132.1 billion. Similarly, the primary result posted a deficit of BRL 66.6 billion, versus a consensus of BRL 60.6 billion. This outcome was composed of deficits in the Central Government (–BRL 56.4 bn), regional governments (–BRL 8.1 bn), and state-owned companies (–BRL 2.1 bn).

The main cause of the surprise was high nominal interest expenses, totaling BRL 109.0 billion in the month. A detailed analysis shows that the turnaround in the Central Bank’s foreign exchange swap operations explains most of the surprise. After a gain of BRL 31.9 billion in June, the operations generated a loss of BRL 12.4 billion in July under the accrual method. This month-to-month deterioration of BRL 44.3 billion roughly matches the BRL 43.5 billion nominal result surprise.

This fiscal performance led to higher public debt. The Public Sector Net Debt (PSND) rose 0.8 percentage points in the month, reaching 63.7% of GDP, above the 63.4% projection. The increase was driven by interest (+0.9 p.p.) and the primary deficit (+0.5 p.p.). The General Government Gross Debt (GGGD) also increased, reaching 77.6% of GDP.

On a 12-month basis, the accumulated primary result turned into a deficit of BRL 27.3 billion (-0.22% of GDP), reversing the surplus observed until June. Accordingly, the accumulated nominal deficit over the same period reached BRL 968.5 billion, equivalent to 7.86% of GDP.

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