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CEE: Coming home after a tough week
Today's calendar offers the July inflation print in Poland, the first estimate of 2Q GDP in the Czech Republic and PPI in Hungary. Most interesting will be the release in Poland, which should give the National Bank of Poland (NBP) ammunition for a dovish U-turn. We expect inflation to fall by one-tenth to 15.4% year-on-year, slightly below market expectations, thanks to fuel discounts. However, we think this is only temporary and we will see inflation pick up again in the coming months.
The Czech Republic will be the first in the region to release its 2Q GDP result, which of course should be the most affected by the Ukrainian conflict. The market expects a -0.4% QoQ drop, which is a significantly better number than the Czech National Bank (CNB) expected in the May forecast (-1.2%). However, the range of estimates is unusually wide, reflecting the uncertainty associated with the effect of the conflict on the Czech economy.
On the FX side, despite the initial hesitation, the Polish zloty managed to get closer to our target levels yesterday, but we believe it still has room to go lower. Of course, the risk is today's inflation release, which, in case of a more significant downside surprise, could erase the market's remaining expectations for further NBP rate hikes and undermine the zloty's path to new gains. The Hungarian forint headed in the opposite direction to our expectations but, like the zloty, it turned around in time and is starting today at similar levels to yesterday. Here as well, we still see room to go lower closer to 400.
The koruna tested the CNB level of 24.60 again yesterday and we can expect this to continue in the coming days. The first available numbers for this week suggest that the central bank has returned to the market after two weeks of silence to prevent the koruna from weakening, however, we expect that only next week's meeting will properly test the CNB's will to keep the koruna below this level.
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