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By Tatiana Bautzer, Camila Moreira and Gabriel Araujo
SAO PAULO, Oct 3 (Reuters) - Brazilian markets surged on Monday, as a stronger-than-expected performance by President Jair
Bolsonaro and his congressional allies in the first round of a general election eased concerns about sharp changes in economic policy.
Brazil's currency strengthened more than 4% against the dollar, while
the benchmark Bovespa equities index jumped 5.5%,
its biggest one-day gain since April 2020.
Several companies rallied over 10%, while preferred shares of state-run oil company Petrobras closed
8% higher in Sao Paulo.
Bolsonaro's leftist challenger, former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva,
fell short of clinching victory in the first round of voting
on Sunday.
Lula finished ahead of Bolsonaro by 5 percentage
points, far less than the 7-17 points advantage forecast by major pollsters.
Bolsonaro's allies also had a strong showing in voting for Congress, limiting Lula's room for dramatic policy changes if he does
return to the presidency.
Marcos Casarin, chief Latin America economist at Oxford Economics, said
the results for Lula's Workers Party in the congressional elections suggested Lula
"would have to form a wide coalition with his former opposition to be able to govern with stability."
"We think this is as close as possible to a best-case scenario for investors," wrote Casarin.
Some investors wagered that Bolsonaro, while not favored,
could eke out a second-round win, allowing him to push forward pro-market reforms and privatizations.
"I think people will see reforms as more probable," said Ricardo Lacerda, founder and CEO of investment bank BR Advisory Partners.
The renewed chances of re-election for Bolsonaro
boosted shares in state-controlled companies in expectation they could be privatized should he secure another four-year term.
In addition to gains for Petrobras, shares in state lender Banco do Brasil SA
closed up nearly 8% on Monday.
The gains came on a strong day for global markets, with Wall
Street up over 2%.
Results in southeastern states such as Sao Paulo and Minas Gerais
also affected stocks with political exposure there.
Bolsonaro's former Infrastructure Minister Tarcisio Freitas came out of Sunday's vote leading the gubernatorial
race in Sao Paulo.
Shares in state sanitation company Companhia
de Saneamento Basico do Estado de Sao Paulo, known as Sabesp
, rose 17% on Monday, the biggest gainer on the Bovespa, based on expectations Freitas could privatize it.
Shares in public power company Cemig and sanitation firm Copasa,
both in Minas Gerais rose 11% and 19%, respectively, after the re-election of pro-market Governor Romeu Zema.
The only losers on the Bovespa were education companies, seen as beneficiaries a
Lula win, as the leftist candidate has been said he would boost public student loans if
elected.
YDUQS nearly 2% and Cogna edged 0.3% lower.
Analysts at Guide Investimentos said that although sectors such as education, capital goods and retail were set
to benefit from an eventual Lula government, the impact would be limited by the new right-leaning composition of Congress.
Gustavo Cruz, strategist for RB Investimentos, said the hard-fought race showed that neither candidate would receive a mandate to implement radical policies.
"Whoever is the winner, he will not have a blank check from the electorate," he said.
(Reporting by Tatiana Bautzer, Gabriel Araujo, Andre Romani and Camila Moreira; Additional
reporting and writing by Gram Slattery in Rio de Janeiro; Editing by Brad
Haynes, Chizu Nomiyama, Rosalba O'Brien and Mark Porter)
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