EMs – All Grown Up?
27 September 2022
Read Time 2 MIN
EM Tightening Cycle
There were more signs of responsible policy-making in emerging markets (EM), as well as some nice macroeconomic results this morning. Central banks in Hungary and Nigeria delivered larger than expected rate hikes to combat persistent inflation pressures. Hungary’s nominal policy rate looks like it belongs in Latin America (LATAM) – at 13%, it is higher than all regional policy rates except Brazil (13.75%). There are good reasons why the Hungarian national bank had to go for another supersized hike (+125bps) – post-election fiscal adjustment is still slow, and domestic political noise adds pressure on the currency (hence, the need to “overcompensate” on the monetary front). Hungary’s example, however, underscores that EM is not a monolith – even within a region. Central banks in Poland and especially the Czech Republic are decidedly more dovish. The Czech National Bank is expected to extend its pause this week – at a mere 7% against the backdrop of 17.2% annual inflation.
Prospects For Rate Cuts In EM
Going back to Hungary’s nominal policy “neighborhood,” Brazil’s central bank minutes sounded hawkish despite signs of further disinflation. Mid-month inflation eased more than expected, dropping below 8% year-on-year (see chart below). However, not all of it was due to Brazil’s early and aggressive rate hike frontloading. Disinflation also reflected some tax cuts, which explains the central bank’s caution and intention to keep the policy rate “high” for a “sufficiently long period.” How long is “long”? Brazil’s local swap curve currently prices in rate cuts later in Q2-2023/Q3-2023. This is not impossible, provided there are no additional political complications (we are very close to the hotly contested elections) and inflation continues to move closer to the target range.
EM Easing And Exchange Rates
Brazil’s credible policy response to the inflation surge is one of the reasons why the Brazilian real remains one of the best performing global currencies so far this year. EMs are generally praised for tightening much earlier than developed markets (DM) peers in this cycle. “Grown-up” policies? Yes. But the real test for EMs might be their ability to start earlier policy easing without adverse consequences for economic fundamentals or asset prices. China’s easing (including small rate cuts) added to deprecation pressures on the currency, forcing authorities to step up policy support for the renminbi. So, it is not that simple. Stay tuned!
Chart at a Glance: Brazil Disinflation – Nice Optics*

Source: Bloomberg LP
*Brazil IPCA-15 CPI Extended National YOY Index - Index that measures Brazil’s YoY Consumer Price Index. IPCA is the benchmark inflation index observed by the Central Bank of Brazil.
Related Insights
07 April 2025
06 March 2025
20 February 2025
10 February 2026
Debasement is back in focus. Here’s what’s driving it, what could reverse it and how we’re positioning portfolios for both scenarios.
07 April 2025
Trump’s tariffs spark trade war fears, fueling market volatility, inflation risk, and recession threats. With global retaliation likely, near-term growth is clearly at risk.
06 March 2025
Trump’s tariffs, AI’s next phase, and a potential U.S. gold revaluation could shake markets—investors who stay ahead of these transitions will be best positioned.
20 February 2025
China's AI breakthrough, persistent inflation, gold’s outperformance, and rising energy demand underscore a shifting investment landscape.
16 January 2025
In 2025, navigating turbulence means balancing tech innovation, inflation hedges, energy shifts, and risks from spending cuts and inflation.