Central bank maintains its "whatever it takes" stance
Similar to the late October rate setting meeting, the widespread market expectation has been met. This means no change in the monetary policy set-up. The central bank did not touch the interest rates in late November. This leaves the regular overnight deposit rate at 12.50%, the base rate at 13% and the overnight repo rate at 25%. According to the Monetary Council’s assessment, maintaining the current level of the base rate for a prolonged period is consistent with the achievement of the price stability objective over the monetary policy horizon.
As a second layer to the monetary policy, the central bank continues to use its tools to tighten the liquidity conditions. In line with that, the NBH decided to hold yet another 2-month deposit tender on 30 November. This shouldn’t come as a surprise with the previous long-term deposits (worth HUF2.6tn) maturing on 1 December. Moreover, during the last month of the year, the NBH will again hold FX swap tenders providing euro liquidity and discount bill auctions with maturities extending beyond the end of the year. For the latter, the central bank will use a fine-tuned framework, possibly raising the demand in those central bank bills, draining more liquidity.
The third layer of the monetary policy mix is provided by the temporary targeted measures introduced in mid-October. We don’t expect any change in this framework in the remainder of the year. The Monetary Council still sees several external risks (war, global monetary policy, energy crisis, general investor sentiment) and internal risks (Rule-of-Law procedure, current account imbalance), which warrant the prolonged use of this new, highly flexible monetary policy set-up.
The forward guidance was updated in a way in that it reflects a possible trigger regarding the implementation of the exit strategy from this third phase. The NBH focuses on sustained shifts in financial market conditions, and it will use its instruments introduced in mid-October until a trend improvement in risk perceptions occurs. In our view, this means that the central bank will take its time to assess the market outcome of a possible positive end to the Rule-of-Law debate and won’t immediately react with its monetary policy set-up.
Regarding the state of the economy, the Monetary Council noted the negative quarter-on-quarter GDP growth in the third quarter and expressed its view about a further slowdown ahead. When it comes to the inflation, we agree with the central bank’s view here as well, that inflation is expected to peak in the coming months, but the normalisation of price pressure will be a slow process.
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