Inflation Exceeds Expectations in Mid-February
Brazil's consumer prices, as measured by the IPCA-15 index, recorded a significant increase of 0.84% in mid-February 2026, according to data released by the official statistics agency IBGE. This figure surpassed market expectations, which had a median estimate of 0.57% in a Reuters poll of economists, and was well above the general market forecast of 0.6%. The rise marks the steepest increase in one year, following a 0.20% increase in mid-January.
The annual inflation rate, covering the past 12 months, reached 4.10%. While this represents a slight deceleration from the 4.50% observed a month earlier, it still topped analysts' expectations of 3.82%.
Key Drivers of the Price Surge
The primary contributors to the mid-February inflation surge were the transportation and education sectors.
- Transportation: This sector saw a notable increase of 1.72%. Within this category, airfares jumped by 11.64%, and public transportation fares surged by 5.39%.
- Education: Prices in the education sector rose by 5.20%, largely due to annual tuition adjustments typically implemented at the beginning of the academic year.
In contrast, other categories like food and beverages (0.20%) and housing and utilities (0.06%) showed more habitual patterns of price increases.
Central Bank's Stance and Future Outlook
The Banco Central do Brasil (BCB), the country's central bank, maintains an inflation target of 3%, with a tolerance band of +/- 1.5 percentage points, setting an upper limit of 4.5%. To combat persistent inflation, the central bank has held its benchmark interest rate, the Selic rate, at a near two-decade high of 15% since mid-2025.
Despite the higher-than-anticipated mid-February inflation data, economists generally still expect the central bank to initiate a monetary easing cycle by cutting the Selic rate in March. However, the unexpected rise in prices may lead the BCB to adopt a more cautious approach, potentially reducing the likelihood of a larger 50-basis-point rate cut. The data for the IPCA-15 was collected between January 15, 2026, and February 12, 2026.
5 Comments
BuggaBoom
This endless inflation is crippling household budgets. When will it stop?
Loubianka
Good. High rates are working, even if slowly. Stick to the plan!
Noir Black
While the monthly surge is concerning, the annual rate's slight deceleration offers a glimmer of hope. The BCB faces a tough call on rate cuts, balancing stability with growth needs.
Eugene Alta
The market overreacted. The annual rate is still within target.
KittyKat
This shows the BCB is right to be cautious. Inflation control is paramount.