
Seasonally adjusted core inflation came to 5.3% year on year, unchanged from Feb, the Central Statistics Office (KSH) has reported on Friday. The month on month rise was up by 0.5% from a 0.4% rise in Feb. The short-based core-inflation figure, closely watched by the central bank, also shows hardly any reduction from February. The quarterly annualised index remained around 6%, at more or less the same level we have seen in the past six months. Taking a slightly more optimistic approach Portfolio Hungary say it is good news that for the first time in a long time the indicator went below 6% (to 5.9%).
Hungarian inflation has thus now exceeded the central bank's 3 percent target since August 2006. Monetary policy makers last month responded by raising interest rates for the first time in 17 months and may now come under pressure to lift borrowing costs again to retain their credibility and to sustain the forint. After all it was only a couple of days ago that Hungarian central bank policy maker Gabor Oblath was saying the bank raised interest rates more than expected last month to signal its commitment to slowing inflation. Perhaps it is going to be pushed to give yet another signal, certainly forward looking yields suggest that they may be.
Meantime Morgan Stanley this morning lowered its rating on Hungarian markets to ‘Equal-weight' from ‘Overweight', citing rising political risks as the reason.









