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EM stocks up 0.58%, FX down 0.13%
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Polish interest rate decision on Nov 5
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Czech rate decision due Nov 6
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Polish manufacturing shows signs of stabilisation in
October
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Hungary's PMI drops to 51.0 in October
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Hungary's Orban to meet President Trump on Nov 7
By Nikhil Sharma
Nov 3 (Reuters) -
Emerging market equities started the new month higher on
Monday after logging modest gains in October, while currencies
stayed subdued as investors looked ahead to the week's key
interest rate decisions from the region.
MSCI's index for regional equities rose 0.6% after
two consecutive days of losses. The index finished October with
a monthly gain of 0.6%, primarily driven by anticipation of a
U.S.-China trade deal and a Federal Reserve interest rate cut.
Meanwhile, a parallel index of EM currencies
slipped 0.1%, while it stayed mostly flat last month.
In Central and Eastern Europe, the Polish zloty
weakened 0.1% on the growing possibility of a rate cut on
Wednesday after last week's soft inflation data.
The currency was on track for a fifth straight daily decline
- its longest streak in more than a year, while the main stock
index jumped 1%.
The National Bank of Poland (NBP) has cut rates by a
cumulative 125 basis points in 2025, and its chief, Adam
Glapinski, has signalled scope for further easing, though he has
been noncommittal about a move in November.
Fresh data showed Poland's manufacturing sector experienced
its slowest decline in six months in October, while Czech
manufacturing activity in October declined at the sharpest rate
since January, as output and new orders remained in a downturn,
and employment shrank.
The Czech crown struggled to find direction, and
Prague equities also traded in tight ranges.
"The weak manufacturing PMIs out of Emerging Europe in
October, at face value, signal further difficulties for the
region's industrial sectors," analysts at Capital Economics said
in a note, but acknowledged that the data would do little to
alter expectations for upcoming monetary policy decisions.
Investors also awaited Thursday's Czech National Bank (CNB)
rate decision, with the consensus expecting rates to remain
unchanged as wage pressures and looser fiscal policy keep
policymakers cautious about further easing.
An election win for Andrej Babis' populist ANO party has
also strengthened the probability for further easing. The party
has pledged to raise public spending, boost pensions and cut
taxes - measures that could, in turn, stoke inflation and widen
the country's fiscal deficit.
Babis-led ANO is expected to sign a coalition agreement with
the eurosceptic Motorists party and the far-right, anti-European
Union and anti-NATO SPD party later on Monday. Babis aims to
form a government by mid-December.
The Hungarian forint rose 0.24% and Budapest
stocks added 0.1%. Manufacturing activity dropped to 51.0
in October from a revised 51.6 in September, signalling a
slowdown in growth while remaining in expansion territory.
The country is gearing up for April elections, and most
polls favour the new centre-right opposition party Tisza, led by
Peter Magyar, over Prime Minister Viktor Orban's Hungarian Civic
Alliance.
Attention is also on Orban's expected Friday meeting with
U.S. President Donald Trump, as the prime minister seeks an
exemption from U.S. sanctions on Russian oil that threaten
Hungary's reliance on crude from Moscow.
Most emerging Asian markets maintained a strong footing on
Monday, with South Korea's Kospi surging 2.7% to hit a
record high, boosted by gains in technology stocks.
Elsewhere, Nigeria's dollar bonds edged lower after Trump on
Sunday talked of potential U.S. air strikes on the country to
stop what he called the killing of large numbers of Christians
in the West African country.
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