Our market views
Given the market reaction, it seems that the market expected more from the NBH today and the central bank prefers to be on the cautious side. Given that the market has been pricing in swift rate cuts for a long time and has been waiting for this moment basically since the beginning of the year, it may not be that painful for the forint. Moreover, the EU story is developing in a good direction. At the global level, conditions for the region remain generally positive, with the forint benefiting the most among its CEE peers. At the local level, FX carry in Hungary remains by far the highest in the CEE region after today and nothing will change in the coming months on this front. Thus, overall, we believe the right conditions persist for the forint to continue to retain market interest. On the other hand, the market's position is probably already long despite last week's sell-off and the direction of monetary policy is clear after today. Thus, given the NBH's cautious approach, we can remain positive on the HUF, but we cannot expect a continuation of the rally as in recent weeks but rather a sideways move in the current range of 370 and 380 EUR/HUF depending on the progress in the EU story and the NBH's boldness in the coming months.
In the rates space, the IRS curve moved up slightly again after the press conference, indicating that the market was expecting more. However, even so, it appears the market may be disappointed again later that monetary policy normalisation is not proceeding as quickly as priced in, just as we saw in the first quarter. The direction at the moment is clear - a lower and steeper curve, but market volatility and liquidity may be tricky again in this case. On the Hungarian government bond (HGBs) side, although we see some fiscal risks, funding is safely under control. According to our calculations, the debt agency (AKK) has secured about 28% of the planned HGBs issuance since the beginning of the year. However, if we take into account the strong activity in retail and FX bonds, AKK has roughly secured about half of its total borrowing needs for this year. Thus, the combination of funding under control, monetary policy normalisation and a positive EU story can be expected to generate more interest from real money investors and HGBs can benefit the most from this situation.
Hungary’s bond issuance needs under control
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