Decisive continuation of the tightening cycle
The Hungarian central bank made a huge splash in the middle of a heatwave in June. It raised the base rate by 185bp to 7.75%. Alongside with that, the whole interest rate corridor was moved up by 135bp. This means that the O/N deposit rate was moved to 7.25%, which means the bank has finally separated this deposit rate from the base rate. The upper band of the corridor, the O/N repo rate now sits at 10.25%.
The National Bank of Hungary (NBH) also made a pre-commitment to hike the 1-week deposit rate by 50bp to 7.75% this Thursday. This means a bit quicker pace of effective tightening as the last step size was 30bp. What is even more important, that from now on, the 1-week deposit rate and the base rate are at the same level. This makes the monetary policy toolkit – or at least the communication about that – simpler and easier to understand. With this decision, the NBH got rid of an element which has kept the market participants confused and less convinced about the hawkish commitment of the central bank.
This decision itself hasn’t eliminated all the hurdles on this extremely difficult monetary policy obstacle course. And though a big one was made to disappear; it can hardly be considered a panacea. The looming rule-of-law debate between Budapest and Brussels, recession fears, the war and sanctions, security of energy supply, twin deficits and inflation are all remain determinant for markets.
Speaking about risks, the Monetary Council sees that the upside risks to inflation have strengthened further, while the latest staff projection shows a significantly higher path of inflation. This means an 11.0-12.6% average inflation in 2022 and a 6.8-9.2% range in 2023, according to the latest Inflation Report. The details behind the surprisingly high forecast will be released on Thursday, but we think the NBH's forecast contains the technical assumption of ending the price caps on 1 October (based on the latest official ruling).
The forward guidance became more hawkish, flipping the continuation of the tightening cycle to “decisive” from “gradual”. With this, we see a clear upside risk to our 9.25% terminal rate call, as the NBH committed to continue its decisive tightening cycle at least until inflation peaks. If 50bp step sizes remain the base case decision on a monthly basis, we will end up at 9.25-9.75% in September-October, where we see the highest probability for inflation to peak.
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