|

HUF: Election outcome boosts Forint as EU risk recedes – Danske Bank

Danske Research Team reports that Hungary’s election delivered a decisive victory for Péter Magyar’s pro‑EU Tisza party over Viktor Orban’s Fidesz, easing concerns about future EU budget and Ukraine aid negotiations. The result has supported the Forint, with EUR/HUF dropping more than 2% to its lowest level since February 2022 as political risk premia decline.

Forint rallies on political shift

"In Hungary, Péter Magyar's centre-right and pro-EU Tisza party beat Orban's nationalist Fidesz party in Sunday's parliamentary election."

"Viktor Orban conceded defeat after early results showed the opposition party leading with a projected two‑thirds majority in the 199‑seat parliament. Reported turnout was at record-high at 77.8% versus 67.8% at the previous parliamentary election."

"With Magyar's election win, the uncertainty surrounding the EU's aid packages to Ukraine and the next EU seven-year-budget is reduced, as there is a much smaller risk that Hungary will block or delay negotiations."

"Magyar, a former Orbán ally, campaigned on rebuilding trust with the EU and NATO, restoring the rule of law and joining the euro area by 2030. However, Magyar does not signal a clear break from Orbán's approach, shares several core positions and he is not seeking an abrupt cut in ties with Russia or clearly advocating for the provision of military aid to Ukraine."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD gathers strength to near 1.1550 ahead of ECB rate decision

The EUR/USD pair trades in positive territory near 1.1540 during the early Asian trading hours on Thursday. Rising bets that the European Central Bank will deliver a rate hike at its June policy meeting later on Thursday underpin the Euro against the Greenback. 


GBP/USD is hawkish for all the wrong reasons

Pound Sterling was handed a gift on Wednesday and dropped it within the hour. A soft core reading inside the US Consumer Price Index report knocked the Dollar back just long enough for GBP/USD to reclaim the 200-day Exponential Moving Average around 1.3400, tagging session highs just beyond it before the entire move was methodically sold through the US afternoon to a close at the day's lows near 1.3350. 

Gold recovers slightly from November 2025 lows; not out of the woods yet

Gold extends the recent breakdown momentum below the 200-day SMA and plummets to its lowest level since November 2025 during the Asian session on Thursday. Renewed hostilities between the US and Iran push Crude Oil prices higher, reviving inflationary concerns and bolstering bets for more hawkish central banks. This continues to drive flows away from the non-yielding bullion, though subdued US Dollar demand helps spot prices to find some support ahead of the $4,000 psychological mark.

CFTC proposes framework to review terrorism, war, assassination-related contracts on prediction markets

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission on Wednesday proposed amendments to Regulation 40.11, seeking to establish a formal framework for reviewing prediction market contracts. The proposed framework targets contracts linked to terrorism, assassination, war, gaming, or conduct that is unlawful under federal or state law.

From sizzle to fizzle: Tech sinks as Oil puts the Fed tail back on the table
Wall Street was not hit by one punch. It was caught between three swinging doors at the same time: a renewed technology unwind, a fresh geopolitical oil bid, and a wave of equity supply that is starting to look less like capital formation and more like a liquidity test for the entire AI complex.
The US economy defies the rules: 100 days into the Oil shock and the recession signal is still missing

More than three months after the start of the Iran war and the resulting disruption to global energy markets, the US economy continues to display remarkable resilience. The conflict has triggered a sharp rise in Oil prices, reignited inflationary pressures and fueled widespread concerns about a potential economic slowdown.