Economic activity rose 0.41 percent in July after seasonal
adjustments. The median forecast in a Reuters poll indicated a
0.10 percent monthly advance in July.
The central bank also revised the previous month's reading to
show a 0.55 percent increase, bigger than the originally
reported 0.50 percent rise.
That should bring some solace to those worried that a nascent
economic recovery may have hit a bump following tepid readings
on retail sales and services activity.
Latin America's largest economy has been crawling out of the
deepest recession in a century, which drove inflation to 18-year
lows and allowed the central bank to cut interest rates to the
lowest levels since 2013.
Slow price increases and low borrowing costs have stimulated
consumer spending, which lifted second-quarter gross domestic
product (GDP) growth above analyst expectations.
Economists expect that to underpin a steady economic rebound
going forward, but investments should recover slowly as
companies prioritize cutting debt.
The central bank's activity index rose 1.48 percent from the
year before, compared to a 0.8 percent increase in June.
(Reporting by Bruno Federowski; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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