Gulf Today

Hungary hikes rates into double digits

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BUDAPEST: THE National Bank of Hungary (NBH) raised its base rate by 100 basis points to 10.75 per cent on Tuesday, taking borrowing costs into double-digit territory for the first time since late 2008 amid a continued rise in inflation.

The decision was in line with the median forecast of 14 economists in a Reuters poll last week. At 1204 GMT, the forint, which sank to a record low versus the euro earlier this month, traded at 401 per euro, a touch weaker than immediatel­y before the announceme­nt.

The weakness of the forint, which is complicati­ng the NBH’S inflation challenge, has forced the bank into its steepest tightening cycle since the collapse of communism, with rate hikes now totalling 485 bps over the past month alone.

“The (Monetary Council) has vowed to decisively continue with the tightening cycle until inflation has clearly peaked (anticipate­d by autumn), and this promise has helped the forint exchange rate recover in recent weeks,” Commerzban­k said.

Hungary’s twin deficits and lack of access to European Union funds had prompted investors to sell the forint amid worsening sentiment on internatio­nal markets, which forced the government to scrap a price cap on energy bills for higher-usage households.

This is expected to raise inflation further, while helping to rein in the budget deficit.

Despite gains to around 400, the forint is still down nearly 8 per cent versus the euro this year, underperfo­rming its regional peers and complicati­ng the NBH’S task of curbing inflation.

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