Hungary’s currency is losing momentum just as analysts had expected it to stand out in Central and Eastern Europe, while Romania and the Czech Republic hold broadly to their existing monetary policy paths, according to ING and recent central bank decisions.
Hungary: from expected strength to renewed pressure on the forint
ING analyst Frantisek Taborsky had projected that the Hungarian forint would remain relatively strong in the region, trading in a tight 355–360 range against the euro.
That view already looks outdated. The forint has since slid beyond the 394 level versus the euro, as fresh data and policy moves prompt markets to reassess Hungary’s economic stability and yield appeal.
New figures show Hungarian inflation cooled faster than expected to 3.6 percent, giving the Magyar Nemzeti Bank ample scope to continue cutting interest rates. While supportive for domestic borrowing conditions, that easing cycle reduces the currency’s yield advantage over its regional peers and has weighed on the forint.
Romania: high inflation keeps rates locked at 7.00 percent
Romania is moving in the opposite direction on inflation. March consumer prices rose 9.9 percent year-on-year, up from 9.3 percent and above market expectations.
Taborsky expects inflation to stay above 10 percent for the next few months, approaching 11 percent in April. On that basis, he sees little room for the National Bank of Romania to cut rates before 2026.
In line with this backdrop, Romania’s central bank kept its key interest rate unchanged at 7.00 percent at its latest meeting. The hold decision, widely expected, underscores a clear preference for price stability over monetary stimulus and signals that borrowing costs are likely to remain elevated in the near term.
This stance leaves the Romanian leu offering one of the highest nominal yields in the region.
Czech Republic: easing continues despite low, rising inflation
The Czech Republic presents a different picture. A flash estimate shows March inflation rising from 1.4 percent to 1.9 percent year-on-year, still below analyst forecasts and far beneath Romania’s double-digit levels. Core inflation previously stood at 2.7 percent in February.
Even so, the Czech National Bank is expected by ING to keep overall financial conditions relatively steady through the rest of the year, despite adjustments at the policy margin.
In its latest move, the central bank delivered another 50-basis-point rate cut, bringing the main policy rate down to 5.25 percent. The reduction points to a stronger emphasis on supporting economic activity, even as headline inflation edges slightly higher.
Currency moves: koruna softens as rate cuts and tensions weigh
The differing rate paths are already visible in currency markets. The euro–Czech koruna pair has been drifting weaker for the koruna, slipping below 24.350 and approaching 24.250.
ING notes that ongoing geopolitical tensions, combined with two rate hikes already priced into markets earlier, make a return to previous euro–koruna lows less likely in the near term. The koruna’s softer tone mirrors the more accommodative stance from Prague compared with Bucharest.
Yield gaps and capital flows: Romania widens its lead
The policy divergence is sharpening yield differentials across the region. The Romanian leu now offers a nominal yield advantage of around 175 basis points over the Czech koruna, a gap that has widened notably over the past quarter.
Romania’s high and sticky inflation has effectively locked in elevated rates, while Czech authorities are cutting. Hungary, meanwhile, is lowering rates from a falling inflation base, eroding the forint’s earlier yield premium.
These differences are shaping near-term capital flows, with higher-yielding Romania standing out but also carrying greater inflation risk, while the Czech Republic and Hungary offer lower yields alongside more growth-oriented monetary policy.
Market focus: data could challenge current currency pricing
Traders are now turning to upcoming purchasing managers’ index (PMI) releases and retail sales figures to assess whether the separate policy paths in Bucharest, Prague, and Budapest are justified by underlying economic performance.
Any upside or downside surprise in growth or inflation data could trigger quick reassessments of currency valuations and rate expectations, particularly where markets are heavily positioned for continued rate cuts or prolonged rate holds.
Regional picture: more easing, weaker currencies
The recent slide in both the forint and the koruna against the euro reflects markets pricing in more accommodative monetary conditions compared with some regional peers.
Hungary’s faster-than-expected disinflation has opened the door to deeper cuts, undermining earlier assumptions of forint resilience. In the Czech Republic, continued easing despite still-low inflation is weighing on the koruna.
By contrast, Romania’s persistent inflation and firm 7.00 percent policy rate have reinforced the leu’s yield appeal, even as the central bank prioritizes stability over growth.
The widening gap in policy stances across Budapest, Bucharest, and Prague is likely to remain a central driver for Central and Eastern European currencies in the weeks ahead.
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