Forint Weakens as Minister Urges Rate Cuts
2025-12-23 10:05
By
Agna Gabriel
1 min. read
The Hungarian forint weakened to around 331.6 per dollar, its lowest level in about a month, after Economy Minister Márton Nagy renewed public pressure on the central bank to cut interest rates.
In an interview, Nagy argued that tight monetary policy has pushed the forint to artificially strong levels and is no longer justified as inflation continues to slow.
He said rate cuts would help support economic growth and ease pressure on the government budget, echoing the long-standing stance of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s administration.
Although the central bank, under Governor Mihály Varga, has resisted political pressure and kept rates unchanged for over a year, it recently signaled openness to easing in 2026 if conditions allow.
Nagy also criticized carry trades, which have boosted the forint by attracting short-term foreign capital seeking high yields, arguing such flows are unstable and do not reflect long-term confidence in the economy.