The Fitch Ratings logo is seen at their offices at Canary Wharf financial district in London,Britain, March 3, 2016.  REUTERS/Reinhard Krause Thomson ReutersThe Fitch Ratings logo is seen at their offices at Canary Wharf financial district in London
By Alonso Soto and Aluisio Alves
SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Fitch Ratings downgraded Brazil's sovereign debt further into junk territory on Thursday, citing a deeper-than-expected economic contraction and changing fiscal targets that have undermined credibility.
Fitch downgraded Brazil to BB from BB+ with a negative outlook a week before a Senate vote that is expected to lead to the ouster of unpopular leftist President Dilma Rousseff.
Henrique Meirelles, a likely finance minister if Vice President Michel Temer becomes president, said the first step Brazil must take is to establish realistic targets.
"Everyone increasingly needs to know that what is signaled, what is declared a goal or a target, will be achieved," he said during a televised interview with Globo News.
The ratings agency in December had stripped Brazil of its investment-grade status in what was a bitter reversal for Latin America's largest economy, seven years after a commodities-fueled boom helped propel it to the coveted top rating.
Fitch said the outlook had weakened further since December, with a 3.8 percent economic contraction expected in 2016 due to "the high level of political uncertainty" as well as deteriorating labor markets and a slowdown in Brazil's top trading partner, China.
If the Senate votes on May 11 to try Rousseff on charges of allegedly manipulating budget accounts, as expected, she will immediately be replaced by Temer during the six-month trial.
"This (downgrade) is due to lack of fiscal control and the absence of political and economic direction in the country," Andre Perfeito, chief economist with Gradual Investimentos. "The arrival of Temer is not being seen as the solution to the fiscal problems which are very deep given the fall in revenues."
Fitch's Brazil director, Rafael Guedes, said in a phone interview the deterioration of Brazil's economic outlook is similar to that of neighboring Argentina in 2001.
He said, however, the country's debt could be upgraded quickly if the government takes action to reduce a ballooning debt burden.
Meirelles, a former central bank chief, said the country's main challenge is to pass measures that would make public debt levels sustainable. He has repeatedly expressed concern with the trajectory of Brazil's rising public debt.
A spokesman for the finance ministry said it did not plan to comment.
In February, ratings agency Moody's cut Brazil's rating by two notches to junk level, while S&P has Brazil at BB, two notches below investment grade.
(Additional reporting by Cesar Raizer and Raquel Stenzel; Writing by Caroline Stauffer; Editing by Diane Craft and Sandra Maler)
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