The Hungarian forint was the trade everyone wanted this year.
Then the central bank made it less juicy on purpose. The forint slid right after.
The Move Nobody Saw Coming
The National Bank of Hungary cut the rate on its FX swaps to 5.25% from 5.75%. Traders weren't waiting for it.
The forint dropped as soon as it landed. Let's break down what just took place in plain English.
A currency swap is a side deal between banks. One bank trades forints for euros today. Then both sides trade back later at a price they set up front.
The rate on those deals tells global traders how much they can earn on forints versus other cash. When the rate is high, big traders pile in. When it drops, they leave.
The cut from 5.75% to 5.25% takes a bite out of the trade global traders had been doing. Less yield means less reason to hold the forint.
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Why The Bank Just Punched Its Own Cash
The forint has been a runaway hit in 2026. It climbed as much as 10% from March lows. That made it one of the year's best emerging-market currencies.
Sounds great. But a strong currency makes Hungarian goods cost more on global markets. That hurts plants, hurts hiring, and hurts growth in time.
The bank has been hinting it wants more stability. It wants less of a one-way rally.
There's also a home-side wrinkle. Hungary cut its main base rate to 6.25% from 6.50% in February. That was the first base-rate move in 16 months.
The cut came as inflation cooled to 2.1%. But the strong forint made more base-rate cuts risky.
Cutting base rates while the currency stays strong tends to fuel inflation. So the bank found a workaround. It left the base rate alone and tweaked the swap rate to take the heat off the forint.
It's a smaller, less public lever. But it works just the same.
The trick is doing it without spooking the market into a much bigger drop.
What To Watch
ING analysts expect Hungary to cut its main rate by another 50 to 75 basis points by the end of 2026. That would take it to about 5.5%.
The bigger question is whether this swap-rate move is a one-off or the start of a softer stance on currency. If the forint keeps dropping from here, more carry-trade cash walks away. That tends to feed on itself.
Hungary's plants need cheaper rates. The currency needs to stop ripping. The swap-rate cut tries to thread both at once. Whether it holds is up to the rest of the year.
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