(Repeats story published late on Tuesday)
* Crown seen weakening against the euro, rebound later
* Percentage drop seen bigger than a month ago
* Poll details on <CZ/ECON07>
By Jan Lopatka
PRAGUE, June 17 (Reuters) - The Czech crown is expected to weaken four percent versus the euro over the next six months on profit taking, an expected interest rate hike in Europe and a weaker economy, a Reuters poll showed on Tuesday.
The 14 analysts in the poll produced a median forecast for the currency to ease to 25.15 to the euro within six months, a deeper dip in percentage terms than previously expected but a stronger level than the 25.7 predicted in May.
The Czech currency has defied analysts' expectations of a correction in the past months and soared to 24.14 last week -- a record high, bar a one-off jump to 23.00 in April -- gaining 15.4 percent against the euro over the past year.
The crown has outpaced other central European currencies, which have also been gaining ground. The Polish zloty has gained 10.9 percent over the past year and the Slovak crown added 10.8 percent, while the Hungarian forint edged up a mere 1.6 percent.
The rise, accelerating this month, has been fed by the Czech economy's strong growth and exports as well as its safe haven status, and possibly by currency firming in neighbouring Slovakia ahead of its euro zone entry next year.
But some temporary cooling is on the cards, analysts said.
"Although we had been rather bullish regarding the Czech crown, its performance over the past few weeks was much better than what we had expected," said Radomir Jac, chief analyst at PPF Asset Management.
"There might be some profit taking on the Czech crown at the end of second quarter of 2008," he said, adding such a move might be spurred by expectations the ECB will raise its benchmark rate by a quarter percentage point to 4.25 percent at its July 3 meeting.
Analysts have said seasonal outflows of dividends should also help knock the crown down in the coming months.
The crown's strength has been a major anti-inflationary factor helping to keep interest rates flat in the past months, despite rising global oil and food prices.
The Czech central bank has left rates flat at 3.75 percent since February, a quarter point below the euro zone, forecasting the firm crown and fading of one-off effects would help cut price growth back toward the bank's target of 3 percent from 6.8 percent year-on-year in May.
Analysts have increasingly shifted from flat rate calls to forecast a tightening, but central bank board member Vladimir Tomsik told Reuters in an interview the crown was a strong factor in favour of stable rates [
].The poll showed a wide gap between individual forecasts, illustrating an unsettled market. The strongest forecast for half a year ahead saw the crown at 23.50, while the weakest called for 26.0.
The median forecast for one month ahead called for a drop to 24.60. In three months as well as a year ahead, the currency was seen at 24.95.
-- For a TABLE with poll forecasts, click on [
] (Editing by Ruth Pitchford)