#CARNIVAL FIRST, PENSION REFORM LATER/Deputies approve report on Brazilian Pension Reform Proposal/ THE BRAZILIAN PEOPLE CALL ON NATIONAL CONGRESS! (ONGOING)
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#BRAZIL ABOVE EVERYTHING,
GOD ABOVE EVERYONE!
Jair Bolsonaro
#CARNIVAL FIRST, PENSION REFORM LATER/Deputies approve report on Brazilian Pension Reform Proposal/
THE BRAZILIAN PEOPLE CALL ON NATIONAL CONGRESS! (ONGOING)
BLOOMBERG PREDICTED ITS BRASILIAN PENSION REFORM FORECAST ACCEPTANCE - In Brazil, It's Carnival First, Pension Reform Later (From Bloomberg LP US)
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Deputies approve report on Brazilian Pension Reform Proposal
After almost 9 hours of CCJ session, score was 48 to 18
State of Minas Gerais Newspaper
posted 23/04/2019 23:55
(photo: Pablo Valadares / House of Represnetatives )
After almost 9 hours of much discussion, bickering and rioting among deputies, the House Constitution and Justice Committee (CCJ) approved on Tuesday the report on the pension reform proposal presented by Deputy Marcelo Freitas (PSL) -MG).
KNOW MORE
• 18:44 - 04/23/2019 Riot in CCJ on Pension reform: 'Do not point the finger at me because I'm not a brat'
• 19:49 - 04/23/2019 Pension reform reporter at CCJ makes changes in opinion
The proposed amendment to the Constitution was delivered by President Jair Bolsonaro (PSL)
to the Congress on February 20. The PEC is one of the main actions of the government in these first months in the Planalto.
With the opinion of the CCJ, by 48 votes to 18, the MEPs gave their approval for the proposal to go to a Special Committee in the House. If it is also approved in this new phase, the text goes to the vote in the plenary of the House of Representatives.
Changes
Regarding text, the rapporteur of the SGP in the committee made the following changes in the text and should be excluded the sections dealing with:
- the end of the 40% fine of the Working Time Guarantee Fund (FGTS) for retirees who continue to work;
- the possibility of reducing by means of a supplementary law at the compulsory retirement age of the server, now in 75 years;
- the executive's exclusive prerogative to propose changes to the retirement rules; and
- the restriction that provided for the possibility of actions against Social Security only in the Federal Court.
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• #ccj
• # camera
• #deputed
• #reform
• # providence
• # voting
• # report
• #proposal
The comments do not represent the opinion of the newspaper and are the responsibility of the author. Messages are subject to prior moderation prior to publication
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SOURCE/LINK: https://www.cnbc.com/2019/03/29/the-future-of-brazilian-stocks-hinges-on-two-words-pension-reform.html
Key Points
- Brazil’s benchmark stock index reached an all-time high earlier this month and is up 8.6 percent for the year.
- Investors in Brazil and across the world are betting that President Jair Bolsonaro will push through key changes to the social security system in Latin America’s largest economy.
- The stakes are high for pension reform in Brazil because an improvement could boost the country’s flagging economy and give it some stability. Failure to enact these changes could stymie economic growth.
Sao Paulo’s Stock Exchange (Boespa) headquarters.Cris Faga | NurPhoto | Getty ImagesBrazilian
stocks are off to a solid start in 2019, but whether they can continue
to climb depends on one major policy shift: reforming Brazil’s
overcrowded public pension system.Brazil’s benchmark stock index — the Bovespa
— reached an all-time high earlier this month and is up 8.6 percent for
the year. The most widely followed ETF for Brazilian stocks — the iShares MSCI Brazil ETF (EWZ) — is up 7.3 percent.
Investors
in Brazil and across the world are betting that newly minted President
Jair Bolsonaro will push through key changes to the social security
system in Latin America’s largest economy. But the path toward reform
will not be a smooth one as the Bolsonaro administration, which already
has a delicate relationship with top lawmakers, faces a lengthy
legislative process.
The stakes are high because pension reform
could boost the country’s flagging economy and give it some stability in
the long run. Failure to enact the changes could stymie growth. The
stock market’s gains could also evaporate as investors shy away from
increasing risks in Brazil.
“We are on the bullish side in the
sense that we are quite confident pension reform is going to be
approved,” said Viccenzo Paternostro, partner at Legacy Capital, a
Brazil-based hedge fund. “Pension reform is crucial because, otherwise,
nobody is going to invest in Brazil because of fiscal issues, inflation
and so on.”
“This is the main risk. If the pension reform is not
approved, the outlook is very negative; nobody is going to invest,”
Paternostro said.
Why Brazil needs pension reform
Brazil’s
retirement age for men who contributed into the country’s pension
system for 15 years is 65; for women, it is 60. However, men can retire
earlier if they pay into the system for 35 years, while for women it’s
30 years. This has pushed down Brazil’s average retirement age to the
early-to-mid 50s, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development.
Brazil
is also one of the most generous countries in the world when it comes
to pensions. Men retiring with full benefits get 70 percent of
pre-retirement earnings, while women get 53 percent. By comparison,
workers in developed economies get full pensions averaging 53 percent of
pre-retirement earnings at an average age of 65.5.
This
system has raised concern over its sustainability and is viewed by many
market participants as a brake on Brazil’s recovery from a massive
recession.
Social security accounts for about a third of all government spending in Brazil and, in 2016, contributed to a record budget deficit. Brazil’s debt levels have also surged to around 75 percent of GDP.
Between
2015 and 2016, real GDP fell for eight straight quarters on a
seasonally adjusted annualized basis before a rebound to start 2017. But
the recovery stalled after the first quarter of 2017, with GDP growth
failing to break above 0.5 percent since then.
“The government
has had to put money to finance [the pension system], but the government
cannot do that anymore because it is in a very fragile fiscal
situation. The fiscal deficit was 7 percent last year,” said Rafael
Amiel, director of Latin American economics at IHS Markit. “The
government debt, as it is going right now, is not sustainable. It will
eventually default if they don’t fix anything.”
Bolsonaro faces obstacles
Bolsonaro’s
pension-overhaul proposal, which was submitted last month, aims to save
the government more than 1 trillion reals — or about $270 billion —
over a 10-year period. This proposal is far more ambitious than former
President Michel Temer’s, which targeted 600 billion reals in savings.
The measure would also implement a fixed retirement age for men and
women at 65 and 62 , respectively.
However, Bolsonaro’s proposal
faces a long legislative process. The measure will also likely be
watered down during the process, setting up the market for
disappointment.
“Timing is the key here, given the complex
political process,” Morgan Stanley economists and strategists led by
Arthur Carvalho wrote in a note earlier this month. “Although we believe
reform will ultimately be approved, we think it will be delayed and a
diluted version of what the market is currently pricing in.”
The
bill was submitted to Brazil’s House Justice Commission on Feb. 20. If
approved by the full House, it moves to the Senate. Any changes there
would send it back to the House.
Morgan
Stanley economists expect a House vote in August, while Goldman Sachs
does not see pension reform turning into law before October.
“In
general, if [Bolsonaro] moves forward with reforms meant to ensure
public-sector sustainability and a reduction of the state’s role in the
economy, there will be opportunities in key sectors,” said Jeffrey
Lamoureux, senior country risk analyst for the Americas at Fitch
Solutions. “However, we nonetheless believe the Bolsonaro administration
will underdeliver on market expectations for pension reforms, which are
an essential part of his economic agenda.”
The measure is also
facing another problem: Bolsonaro himself. The right-wing president’s
popularity has plummeted, with only 34 percent saying his government was
doing a “great/good” job, according to pollster Ibope. That’s down
from 49 percent in mid-January.
Bolsonaro won Brazil’s presidency
last year in part by saying he would pass measures to reduce violence
and curb widespread corruption. But since being elected, Bolsonaro has
struggled to build the necessary coalition needed to move forward with
those plans. Bolsonaro lost the support of Brazil’s top lawmaker,
Rodrigo Maya, amid insinuations he was stalling on anti-corruption
measures.
Brazilian stocks are down sharply this month. The
Bovespa index has fallen 3.9 percent in March while the EWZ ETF has
dropped 8.7 percent.
Nonetheless, many investors believe some sort of pension reform will get done and that will boost Brazilian stocks.
“Most people think some kind of reform is going to be approved because,
over the past few years, the awareness of the population regarding the
need to approve some kind of reform has broadened,” said Diney Vargas,
managing partner at Sao Paulo-based hedge fund Apex Capital. “Companies
will be hiring, people will have more jobs and people’s purchasing power
will improve.”
But the process could go wrong, Vargas said. The
plan could fail or, if the proposed savings are too low to change
Brazil’s economic fortunes, “then we’ll have a problem.”
What to buy
Legacy
Capital’s Paternostro says investors betting on pension reform should
consider companies with “operating leverage that benefits from GDP
growth,” including airlines.
Paternostro likes Azul Brazilian Airlines,
noting higher demand in the wake of rival Avianca Brasil’s filing for
bankruptcy protection. “Assuming demand is going to increase, it will
be positive for the company.”
Azul’s New York-listed shares are up
more than 60 percent in the past six months, outperforming the Bovespa
index and EWZ fund by a wide margin.
Another stock on Paternostro’s radar is department store chain Lojas Renner.
“Their operating leverage is quite high, and if consumption is going
to increase, then it would lead to a very beneficial net-income outlook
for the company,” he said.
Vargas said his hedge fund has
positions in several consumer discretionary companies, including online
marketplace Mercado Libre and Lojas Renner.
“Brazil is in a place where, if you approve the reforms, you’re going to see the economy growing faster,” he said.
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