The yield on Brazil’s 10-year government bond has climbed above 13.91% as global sovereign debt markets come under pressure from escalating energy shocks and increasingly defiant rhetoric from Tehran. Investors are now pricing in the inflationary fallout of Brent crude stabilizing near $100 per barrel after Mojtaba Khamenei asserted that the Strait of Hormuz will remain closed, forcing a repricing of interest-rate expectations and heightening fears of a global energy crisis.
Domestically, the Banco Central do Brasil is contending with a resilient labor market, with unemployment at 5.4%, threatening to delay the easing cycle originally signaled for March 18. Although elevated real yields continue to draw in foreign carry trade, the abrupt surge in urea prices triggered by the maritime blockade poses a serious threat to agricultural productivity and food price stability at home. At the same time, markets are increasingly focused on the erosion of fiscal credibility, following political concessions that have channeled spending into regional projects at the expense of previously stated primary surplus targets.