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CEE: NBH to assure market that it is too early for change
More action returns to the region this week. We start on Tuesday with the National Bank of Hungary meeting. In line with the market, we expect rates to remain unchanged. There is no discussion on the macro side. Central bankers are waiting for a tangible and sustained improvement in domestic and external risks and it is clear that the developments so far are positive but still insufficient for the NBH to reverse course. From a market perspective, however, the main question is whether the central bank can maintain the hawkish tone it set in January. PMI indicators for February across the region will be released on Wednesday. We expect a slight improvement in sentiment in Poland and the Czech Republic and a deterioration in Hungary. We will also see the final GDP numbers for the fourth quarter of last year across the region during this week.
On the ratings side, we have two interesting reviews in the CEE region this week - Moody’s in Hungary and Fitch in the Czech Republic. More interestingly, Hungary received a negative outlook and rating downgrade recently from Fitch and S&P and we expect a negative outlook from Moody’s as well. In the Czech Republic, Fitch downgraded the outlook already last year to negative. In our view, the risk of a rating downgrade has diminished since the last review in October but is still significant.
In the FX market, this week the main focus will be on the Hungarian forint to see if it can extend its rally. The main driver will be NBH and its efforts to maintain a hawkish tone. Given market expectations, the central bank may only deliver a small push to the forint, but it's still worth being bullish and testing new levels below 380 EUR/HUF, in our view. However, at the end of the week, Moody’s will remind us that there are still a number of issues on the table in Hungary led by EU money access, which should bring the forint back to or above 380 EUR/HUF.
Frantisek Taborsky
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