So overall, everything revolves around the Hungarian forint at the moment. Moreover, this topic is of course linked to the EU money issue, which we expect to be back on the table in the coming weeks. However, in case of a negative surprise, we could also see a spillover into FX due to the higher market attention. This should be good news for Hungarian government bonds. Today, we expect the deficit in Hungary to remain roughly unchanged. However, in the Czech Republic, we have already seen the trend turn over, and in Romania, the government is trying to come up with a revision of the state budget in an attempt to keep the numbers under control. State budgets are showing bad numbers across the region. The last two months show signs of stabilisation of the deficit at 85% of this year's target. Later today we will also get the Hungarian state budget result for July. This, despite the decline in recent weeks, is one of the highest in the emerging market universe and by far the highest in the CEE region. Without many surprises, the market has no reason to push the central bank to cut rates faster, undermining the main attraction – FX carry. This is good news for the economy and the central bank, but also good news for the forint. While inflation remains by far the highest in the CEE region, it is below 20% for the first time since last September and we expect it to be in single-digit territory by the end of the year. This is 0.1pp below market expectations and 0.1pp above central bank expectations. This morning, July inflation in Hungary was released, posting a drop from 20.1% to 17.6% year-on-year. Tomorrow, the NBR will present a new inflation report, however, for now we have silence from this side. Yesterday's meeting of the National Bank of Romania (NBR) was as expected and there were no surprises. Today, some focus will be on the ECB’s Consumer Expectation Survey, which includes inflation expectation figures, and final CPI numbers for July in Germany and other EU countries.ĬEE: Inflation in Hungary finally below 20% We had warned our readers that August might well have been a directionless month for EUR/USD: things can change (developments in the Russia-Ukraine conflict should be followed closely, to name one), but we have not received any strong indication so far that EUR/USD may materially drift away from a 1.09-1.11 range this month. The pair remains overbought according to CFTC positioning data (+23% of open interest), but there are clear indications that the process of adding EUR longs/building USD net shorts has stalled again in July.Īll in all, it appears that EUR/USD has managed to navigate the worst (barring new volatility peaks) of the US bond sell-off relatively easily, a sign that markets remain reluctant to let go of a cyclical currency like the euro in the current market environment (despite a deteriorating outlook for the eurozone economy) and the room for a big dollar recovery remains still narrow given markets now expect the Fed to be done with monetary tightening. Still, we expect some consolidation of the dollar around current levels into Thursday’s inflation numbers.Īccording to our short-term fair value model, EUR/USD’s equilibrium level currently sits around 1.0950, quite close to spot. At this stage, it would probably take a larger swing in yields to cause a substantial spill-over into FX than it did before the US credit downgrade by Fitch. With the exception of the yen, it appears that most G10 currencies are losing their direct exposure to swings in US bond yields. It will be interesting to hear what FOMC members Patrick Harker and Thomas Barkin say about the economy in two separate speeches today, especially following last week’s slightly weaker-than-expected headline payroll figures. Today, the key highlights are the NFIB Small Business Confidence Optimism Index – which is expected to rise very marginally from June – trade balance figures from June, and final wholesale inventory numbers. The US data calendar only includes second-tier releases until Thursday’s CPI figures. With the Bank of Japan normalisation still looking too remote to temper bearish pressure on the yen, USD/JPY is the most exposed G10 pair to the ongoing bond market instability, especially given some signs of resilience in US equities, which limited losses in high-beta currencies. We continue to observe rather elevated volatility in bond markets, with long-dated Treasury yields rising again: unsurprisingly, the only notable move in FX since the weekend has been another leg higher in USD/JPY. It’s been a slow start to the week in the currency market, with the dollar being mixed but generally supported yesterday and in today’s Asian session.
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