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CEE: Czech inflation to rise again
Yesterday's meeting of the National Bank of Romania (NBR) brought a 25bp rate hike to 7.00%, as expected. Although we consider this to be the last hike in this tightening cycle, we feel that the NBR wants to keep the door open if needed. But probably the most interesting part is the dropping of the "firm liquidity control" commitment. While dovish in essence, we read this more like an after-the-fact acknowledgement rather than any forward guidance. The Romanian leu barely changed yesterday but we still think it should benefit from global factors, catch up with the lag behind the region and make another move below NBR levels.
Today, the focus shifts to the Czech Republic. December inflation we think will show a rise from 16.2% to 16.4% year-on-year, above market expectations. However, as we showed earlier, there is still room for upside surprises. Moreover, fuel prices are the main reason for slower inflation than we have been used to, while inflation remains strong in other parts of the CPI. For the market, the higher number should be a reminder that the inflation problem is still with us and this may be the first opportunity this year to reassess the strong dovish expectations built up recently. At the one-year horizon, markets expect a 170bp rate cut, which is hard to believe given the current Czech National Bank rhetoric, the record strong koruna and the inflation profile.
However, the koruna is looking the other way and ignoring domestic conditions. More important for it and the entire CEE region at the moment is the global story, the massive improvement in sentiment in European markets and gas prices below EUR70Mwh. This, in our view, should keep the positive sentiment in the region at least for the rest of the week and keep FX steady.
Frantisek Taborsky
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