Brazil’s Credit Rating and the US inflation problem

by Editor on March 11, 2010

In 1989 Moody’s changed the credit rating of Brazil to BB- unjustly, causing enormous suffering and strife to the Brazilian citizen and government.

Moody’s and S&P, and most Americans, have yet to understand the concept of Real Interest rates, rather than Nominal Interest rates, which is an incomplete pricing method. It misleads investors into believing that they are receiving much more "interest" than they really are. In Brazil that would be a against the law.

During 1989 to 2009, Brazil always had the ability to pay the Real Interest rate of its debts, plus an extra for amortization. It never justified the rating of "questionable ability to pay".

Now a Brazilian Rating Company has used the justification against the US Treasuries. Since they are not indexed to inflation "there is a questionable doubt that investor’s will receive the true value of their investment, because of future US inflation".

For 30 year treasuries, where a 4% inflation will erode principal by 50% at least, a double CC would have been more appropriate. But that would have seemed overreacting.

But it is about time the US realize that Nominal Interest Rates is a form of wrong measure, wrong pricing model, since part of that interest is inflation, and not interest. And inflation is not income by any means.

That is one the reason’s of the sub-prime crisis. Forcing poor people to pay "inflated interest rates" in the beginning of their life cycle, and paying totally eroded principal 30 years down the line.

Meanwhile inflation in Brazil is under control and the country today provides the highest real interest rate in the world which makes it an essential market for investments in and high yield bonds.

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