On the radar
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Final inflation reading in December was confirmed at 4.5% y/y in Croatia.
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Core inflation in Poland eased to 6.9% y/y in December.
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In Czechia, producer prices landed at 1.4% y/y December up from 0.8% y/y in November.
Economic developments
On Monday, a preliminary estimate showed that German GDP experienced a decline of 0.3% in 2023. In quarterly terms, Germany witnessed a contraction of 0.3% in Q4. However, the growth in Q3 was revised upwards to 0% from an initial -0.1%, thereby avoiding a technical recession. This development poses a concern for countries in the CEE region, given their close economic ties with Europe's largest economy. A few months ago, we published a report titled "To what extent is CEE resilient to German slowdown?", which delves into this specific issue. As part of a technical exercise, we developed an econometric model using historical data to estimate the impacts of economic changes among countries, with a particular focus on Germany's influence on the CEE. As shown in the chart, one of the model's outcomes was an estimation of how a 0.5% slump in the German economy (on q/q basis) impacts the CEE. Over a span of 12 quarters, the most significant impact is observed in Czechia and Slovakia. However, except for Czechia, Romania and Hungary experience the most severe impact in the same period as the shock occurs, although the effect dissipates rapidly in the case of Romania.
Market movements
CEE currencies have remained weaker against the euro this week, while long-term yields moved up since the beginning of the week. In Poland, a member of the central bank's board, Sobon, voiced his opinion that speculations on the sale of government bonds bought by the central bank during the pandemic are irresponsible. In Hungary, the Economic Minister Nagy commented that the pace of fiscal tightening in 2024 should be cautious to avoid dampening the fragile economic recovery. Romania is preparing to sell its first green and Samurai bonds. Treasury Chief Nanu also hinted that euro and dollar-denominated bond issuances are in the pipeline. As for monetary policy, Romanian central bank Board Member Popa said that two or three months are needed to evaluate inflation development before discussing rate cuts.
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作者:Erste Bank Research Team,文章来源FXStreet,版权归原作者所有,如有侵权请联系本人删除。
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