Cushioned by growth and facing elections, Poland is becoming an outlier in central Europe, where other countries are trying to curb the growing strength of their currencies in the face of the euro zone's massive money-printing plan. Hungary, Romania and Serbia have all cut rates this year to prevent their currencies from gaining too much, as the European Central Bank's programme feeds 60 billion euros a month into the continent's economy through September 2016.
The Czech Republic has put a cap on the value of the crown and pledged to intervene to keep it from rising Poland, on the other hand, says it will not cut interest rates from the current 1.5 percent, even though the zloty has risen nearly 7 percent against the euro since the start of 2015 - more than any other regional currency.
And with Polish bonds providing a significant yield premium over negative or rock-bottom euro yields, more cash is likely to flood in, barring a major flare-up in neighbouring Ukraine or a Greek exit from the euro zone. "Poland is clearly more confident than its neighbours of sustaining relatively strong growth without a weaker currency," said Manik Narain, a strategist at UBS in London. Indeed, all recent data show a recovering economy, which the government expects will grow at 3.4 percent this year. While inflation is currently at minus 1.5 percent, the government expects it to reach 1.7 percent by next year. The housing market, at least in Warsaw, is robust.
What's more, presidential and parliamentary elections are due this year, and a strong currency plays well with voters enjoying cheaper vacations and imported goods, analysts note. There are also 550,000 Poles holding mortgages denominated in Swiss francs. They saw monthly payments jump after January, when the Swiss central bank abandoned its cap on the franc. A weaker zloty would exacerbate their plight, probably to the detriment of the ruling Civic Platform.
"Poland has some of the strongest cyclical numbers in terms of industrial output and retail sales, plus there is the fact that Europe's economy continues to improve. This is causing them to hold back," said Koon Chow, investment strategist at Swiss private bank UBP.
A side effect of Poland's reluctance to curtail zloty appreciation is likely to be more investment flows from funds fleeing the euro zone's negative yields - Polish 5-year bonds yield a respectable 2.0 percent-plus. In fact, Poland's inflation-adjusted rate of 3 percent is the highest among 23 big economies, bar Brazil and Nigeria, Reuters data shows. The zloty jumped 1 percent on Monday, approaching recent 3 1/2-year highs. Chow reckons if the zloty appreciates further, Poland will have no choice but to follow its neighbours' lead and stem appreciation. A 25 bps rate cut by mid-year is likely, he says.
So far, of all the countries struggling to contain their currencies, the Czech Republic has gone furthest. It cut interest rates to near zero in 2012, and in late 2013 declared it would keep the crown weaker than 27 per euro to ward off deflation.
However, the Czech economy was in recession in 2012 until early 2013. In contrast, Poland has grown robustly for the last 20 years. That makes deflation a far greater threat for Prague. Hungary, meanwhile, resumed policy easing in March, cutting rates to a record-low 1.8 percent and signalling more ahead. Government plans to cut Hungary's high banking tax show its intention to ask banks to increase lending, analysts say. That makes low interest rates a necessity.
Romania and Serbia have also cut rates and both have intervened in currency markets to tamp down the leu and dinar. All that has taken some steam out of those currencies. The forint, for instance, is down about 1 percent since the April 21 rate cut.
A key motivation, of course, is trade. Exports, mostly to the euro zone, accounted for 88 percent of Hungary's annual economic output, World Bank data for 2013 showed. Czech exports were 77 percent of gross domestic product. Poland, by in contrast, with 40 million people, has a healthier domestic market, with exports comprising just 46 percent of GDP. Still, for some, central bankers' lack of concern is worrying, especially as the zloty's impact is already being felt among exporters. The exchange rate, currently 4 per euro, is just 3 percent off 3.91. Beyond that level, companies say, exports become unprofitable. And business sentiment has worsened this year, with the zloty's appreciation and falling prices having "negatively affected sales margins, both export and domestic ones", according to a central bank poll, which also predicted "relatively low exports dynamics" ahead.
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