Analysis-Lula’s embrace of new Brazil central banker has markets wary

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By Marcela Ayres

BRASILIA (Reuters) – After months of rancor, ties between President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Brazil’s central bank look poised for an era of sweetness and light – which is precisely what worries some investors.

Gabriel Galipolo, 42, is set to take the reins at the bank on Wednesday. The former deputy finance minister has earned a reputation for economic views that sometimes stray from his predecessor’s embrace of free markets but warm the hearts of left-leaning politicians.

While that should help quiet months of sniping from a president exasperated with high interest rates, it may test the new formal independence of that institution, six of its former directors told Reuters.

Galipolo takes over from central bank governor Roberto Campos Neto, an appointee of former President Jair Bolsonaro, in the first transition since a 2021 law that required heads of state to wait two years before naming their own central bank chief, in a move designed to boost the bank’s autonomy.

The handoff will be scrutinized after frustration with government spending plans triggered a market meltdown, sending Brazil’s risk premium surging and its currency to all-time lows.

The central bank declined a request for comment from Galipolo, who now serves as one of its policy directors.

Galipolo and Campos Neto have played down their differences and vowed continuity at a shared news conference on Dec. 19.

Now leading the country in his third nonconsecutive term, Lula praised Galipolo in a social media video on Dec. 20, vowing fiscal discipline and a hands-off stance toward the central bank.

Concerns remain, however, about a shift in monetary policy, dating back to a split policy decision in May when Galipolo and three other Lula appointees voted for a larger rate cut than the Bolsonaro-appointed majority. Starting in January, Lula’s picks will hold seven of the nine seats on the central bank’s rate-setting committee, or Copom.

All five of the central bank’s rate decisions since May have been unanimous, including December’s bigger-than-expected 100 basis-point hike that came with surprising policy guidance of planned increases of the same size in January and March of 2025.

Despite the united front and hawkish rhetoric from Galipolo, who has pledged independence from Lula, some economists say the market remains unconvinced.

“The forward guidance was issued precisely because there are concerns,” said former central bank director Alexandre Schwartsman, appointed during Lula’s first term in 2003. “It’s a symptom, a recognition there are serious doubts about how (Galipolo) will behave, whether he will truly be independent or not.”

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