On Sunday 8 January, thousands of supporters of former President Jair Bolsonaro stormed the empty buildings of the Brazilian Congress, the Presidential palace, and the Supreme Court. They claimed, without evidence, that the 2022 election result had been rigged in favour of Lula, accused Supreme Court judges of favouring the socialist candidate, and demanded the army’s intervention to overturn the election result and reappoint Bolsonaro. Scenes resembled events in the US Congress when supporters of former President Donald Trump stormed into the US Capitol protesting against Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory. However, in contrast to events in the US, Jair Bolsonaro distanced himself from these violent protests despite failing to concede defeat after the election and refusing to attend Lula’s inauguration on 1 January.1 The protests were rapidly contained by the police and condemned by most of the Brazilian population who accepted the results of the democratic election.
Market reaction
Despite the negative headlines that diverted attention away from budget negotiations and discussions over cabinet nominations, the protests had no effect on Brazilian financial markets. The Brazilian real (BRL) was largely unaffected. In 2022, positive real bond yields in Brazil and the improvement in terms of trade due to high commodity prices, favoured a strengthening of the BRL by 5.6% in the first six months of 2022. Since the start of 2023 the real has appreciated more than other currencies, as the BRL gained 4.0% against the US dollar, while the trade weighted dollar has weakened by 1.4% YTD.2 Current USD/BRL levels reflect the strength of the Brazilian currency against the purchasing power parity estimate (see Chart 1).