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Central Banker Who Declared Inflation Dead Now Battling It

(Bloomberg) -- Even in a world where more than a decade of ultra-low interest rates has largely failed to ignite prices, there’s still room for a surprise -- as one Hungarian central banker has found.

Deputy Governor Marton Nagy told a conference in Budapest in October that inflation was effectively dead globally and near-zero borrowing costs were here to stay. Snap forward just four months and he’s facing the fastest ramp-up in prices in the European Union.

His central bank, one of the planet’s most dovish, has begun to act -- steering interbank interest rates higher to tame inflation. Price growth is elevated across Europe’s east and has already prompted hikes in benchmark borrowing costs elsewhere.

Investors are now weighing whether Hungary’s policy pivot will amount to more than the fleeting bouts of support they’ve witnessed in the past for the forint, which traded near a record-low against the euro on Monday.

The key determination for currency traders is whether this is “a more material shift in direction,” Goldman Sachs said in an emailed note. “Without a clearer path” toward higher rates, the forint will “move back to its weakening trend.”

Inflation rocketed to an annual 4.7% in January, the most in seven years and way above the official 3% target. The jump left Hungary with one of the lowest real interest rates globally.

‘All Tools’

Currency investors have more attractive options close at hand: the nearby Czech Republic delivered the world’s first rate hike of 2020 this month, its ninth since 2017.

Hungary has pledged to “use all available tools” to contain inflation and is draining liquidity pumped into the system in recent years to keep borrowing costs close to zero. That’s tightened monetary conditions by the equivalent of two quarter-point rate hikes in the past month.

The central bank has room to do more without touching its official benchmark, which at 0.9% is still 30 basis points above interbank rates.

Major monetary-policy decisions are usually only taken once a quarter, the next possible time coming in March. But the bank holds monthly meetings, with another set for Tuesday, when its statement will be scrutinized for evidence of a shift in policy.

Nagy isn’t alone in misreading inflation: Poland’s central bank is also grappling with an upswing in prices that it didn’t predict.

And Nagy, who despite being just 43 has worked at the central bank for 18 years, has been right in the past to the extent that his colleagues invariably voted with him on big decisions.

In slashing interest rates, he correctly predicted inflation would also ease. In harnessing the central bank’s firepower, he helped transform the recession-stricken economy into one of the EU’s fastest growing.

His recent remarks could yet serve as a warning for others.

“The lesson” from central and eastern Europe “is that inflation across the Western world is likely hibernating rather than dead,” said Emiel Van den Heiligenberg, head of asset allocation at Legal & General Investment Management in London.

(Updates with currency in fourth paragraph.)

To contact the reporters on this story: Marton Eder in Budapest at meder4@bloomberg.net;Zoltan Simon in Budapest at zsimon@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Zoltan Simon at zsimon@bloomberg.net, Andrew Langley

For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com

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©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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