With Czech central bank signaling hike, money market hesitates

31 Jul, 2017

The Czech central bank is flagging the first interest rate hike in more than nine years in August or September, but large sections of the market don't believe it. The view has been that a firmer crown and loose European Central Bank policy will stay Prague's hand - a notion central bank watchers and analysts reckon means local money markets are underpricing the chance of a Czech hike.
However, with the Czech economy on pace to grow around 3 percent this year and next, inflation above target, Europe's lowest unemployment pushing up wages, and house prices soaring, there are solid arguments for a hike. That makes the crown's exchange rate - freed from a cap in April - the only key variable that may push the first interest rate hike to a later date. The bank has made the importance of the exchange rate clear and has sent varying signals in the past months as the currency's appreciation pace fluctuated. "With a stronger crown you don't have the urgency to tighten," Aberdeen Asset Management portfolio manager Viktor Szabo said. "We are still seeing (crown) appreciation, so for the time being it looks fine."
The Czech National Bank (CNB), though, hinted after its June meeting that a hike - the first one in the European Union in five years - is near, indicating the third quarter. This has persuaded some analysts, but not all. The crown got a boost last week after Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BofAML) tipped a rate rise for the August 3 central bank meeting.
It firmed briefly past the psychological 26 per euro level for the first time since it was set free and is now 3.8 percent stronger than its former cap. "It is a close call on timing, but it is just a matter of months for the hikes to come," BofAML said. "Markets continue to underprice the CNB's near-term tightening prospects."
Forward rate agreements have risen in the past week but mostly on longer maturities, giving little chance to an August move and not fully pricing a September hike. This reflects the general situation on global markets, analysts say. "(Investors) don't believe central banks can raise rates so soon," J&T Banka economist Petr Sklenar said. "The risk is if central banks (do) increase interest rates in the United States and the Czech Republic, there will be a period that the market will need to re-price in a short period."

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