The decision to cut rates to a record low of 5.50% by the bank's nine-member rate-setting committee, known as Copom, was unanimous. "The authority seems to reveal a bolder flight plan in terms of new stimuli ahead," Rabobank strategists wrote in a note. "Thus, we now look for two (instead of one) rate cuts of 50bp down the road, with Selic (overnight rate) ending the year at 4.50%."
Other Latin American currencies including Mexico's peso and Colombia's peso made marginal gains. MSCI's index of Latin American stocks increased marginally, helped by Brazil's Bovespa, which rose more than 1%, boosted by shares of state-run oil company Petroleo Brasileiro. Petrobras moved nearly 2% higher after the company hiked the average price of gasoline at refineries by 3.5% and the price of diesel by 4.2%, a company representative told Reuters.
Telecommunications firm Oi also gained, up 1.6%, after sources said it was in talks with Spain's Telefonica and Italy's Telecom Italia to sell its mobile network to avoid insolvency.