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CEE: Ecofin may close the Hungarian saga
This week will kick off with the release of wage growth in the Czech Republic, a key number for the Czech National Bank given that a wage-inflation spiral is a major risk for the board. The central bank forecasts 6.1% in nominal terms; we expect a number closer to 8.0% year-on-year. However, we don't believe this will be enough to trigger a hawkish reaction. On Tuesday, EU finance ministers may vote on a European Commission proposal to freeze Hungary's access to EU funds. On Wednesday, we will see industrial production results in the Czech Republic and Hungary where we expect to see slowing but still solid numbers. In Romania, a breakdown of 3Q GDP will be published and later we will see the National Bank of Poland's decision. After the publication of inflation last week, which surprised to the downside, we can expect nothing but a confirmation of the end of the hiking cycle. Then on Thursday, November inflation in Hungary will be published. We expect a further jump in YoY numbers from 21.1% to 22.4% and a similar jump in core inflation, in line with market expectations.
In the FX market, the CEE region remains well supported by the external environment, despite our expectations, especially thanks to the weak US dollar, which remains a question mark for this week. At the local level, the main themes remain the same: Hungarian forint and Polish zloty.
In Hungary, FX remains mainly driven by the EU story and we should see new headlines this week. However, the markets are visibly losing patience, resulting in high volatility, which we expect this week as well. Positioning in our view became more balanced last week, creating room for a new rally if we hear positive news, which is our baseline. In this case, we expect the forint to return below 405 EUR/HUF.
In Poland, the main topic will of course be the NBP's meeting, which will again test the market's willingness to accept the decision to end the hiking cycle. The massive rally in rates and POLGBs last week following the release of inflation data further widened the gap between the zloty and interest rate differential. FX thus remains vulnerable, in our view. We remain bearish with expectations for the zloty to return above 4.72 EUR/PLN.
Frantisek Taborsky
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