|

Polish Zloty: NBP seen on extended hold – Societe Generale

Societe Generale analysts expect the National Bank of Poland (NBP) to keep its policy rate unchanged at 3.75%, with a status quo stance likely through the second half of 2026 and early 2027. Inflation is currently within target, while growth has improved. Money markets, however, are pricing in around 75 basis points of tightening over the next year.

Stable policy against modest tightening pricing

"In Poland, we expect the NBP to leave its policy rate unchanged at 3.75% today. Our base case is for status quo throughout 2H and early 2027."

"Inflation is within the bank’s target range of 1.5%-3.5%. Headline CPI is running at 3.1% yoy and core at 3.0% in May. 1Q GDP expanded by 0.6% qoq and 3.5% yoy."

"Finance minister Domanski welcomed the friendlier inflation data and the upward revision to growth, praising the domestic economic resilience."

"Money markets are pricing in about 75bp of tightening by the NBP in twelve months compared to 71bp of easing in Hungary."

"The question now is whether the HUF and local bonds can outperform the PLN deep into 2H?"

(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

CLARITY Act approval odds sink fast ahead of Congressional hearing
The United States (US) House Financial Services Committee’s Subcommittee on Digital Assets, Financial Technology, and Artificial Intelligence (AI) is holding a hearing titled “Building the Future of Finance: How the CLARITY Act Unlocks Innovation” on Friday.
Week ahead – Could technology earnings revive equities as geopolitical risks linger?

Oil prices rise, but the dollar posts losses as Middle East tensions persist. US earnings, the ECB and UK newsflow dominate next week’s agenda. US equity markets face a pivotal test as focus shifts to technology earnings.

-0.4%: Why the biggest CPI drop since 2020 couldn't buy back a single cut

The June CPI fell 0.4% on the month, the largest one-month decline since April 2020, dragging the annual rate to 3.5% from May's 4.2% and snapping a three-month acceleration streak. Core prices went nowhere, flat on the month and down to 2.6% YoY, both under consensus.