(Repeats story published late on Monday)
By Sandor Peto-Jason Hovet
BUDAPEST/PRAGUE, Feb 9 (Reuters) - Currencies in Central Europe jumped on Monday, erasing earlier losses, with Poland's zloty taking the lead, but the global appetite for risk may have rebounded only for the short term, dealers said.
Stocks also reversed to trim losses, along with some western peers, although investors showed caution pending the approval in the United States of a massive stimulus plan. [
]The zloty <EURPLN=> added 2.94 percent to 4.418 to the euro, even though Polish sovereign five-year credit default swaps (CDS) rose 15 bps to a record high of 343.8 following a weekend denial by Poland's finance minister that the country was in talks with the International Monetary Fund for possible support.
"We seem to have a sea change in sentiment for risk at the moment... Some risk is being put back on now," one London-based dealer said, adding that market liquidity remained low.
"It still looks corrective; I'm a bit suspicious that it looks people think everything is alright with the world. But people are not going to stand (in the zloty's) way for now."
The crown <EURCZK=> firmed 1.8 percent over Friday's domestic close to bid at 27.545 per euro by 1401 GMT.
Dealers said there was more room to rise after the central bank last week unveiled an FX forecast showing much stronger local currency levels than today. [
]"The euro/crown has more potential for a deeper correction," a Prague trader said, adding a support level will be hit at 27.4 per euro. "Investors are starting to look at riskier assets."
The Hungarian forint <EURHUF=> firmed 0.63 percent to 286.85 per euro, and the Romanian leu <EURRON=> gained 0.24 percent to 4.228.
Hungary's central bank allocated 820 million Swiss francs at its one-week euro-Swiss franc swap tender on Monday, up from 303 million francs a week ago and dealers said the tenders can have a positive impact on the forint in the long term.[
]"If the bank will be able to hold them regularly, with sizeable amounts, the tenders can help Hungarian banks and in an indirect way it can also help their clients (borrowers), reducing the pressure on foreign currency loan holders," one local dealer said.
BONDS FIRM
Currencies have been hit hard in 2009 by risk aversion, and economic outlooks point to a sharp slowdown this year due to slumping demand from a recession-hit euro zone.
Rate setters have loosened monetary policy in response, while currencies' sharp reversal from all-time highs seen last summer has left many exporters overhedged.
The currency falls in the past weeks trimmed expectations for further interest rate cuts, but Monday's firming which helped government bonds rebound may revive hopes for rate cuts.
Traders said foreign investors again bought Polish and Hungarian bonds, which may be the impact of central bank interest rate cuts and economic stimuli programmes announced in developed countries in the past weeks.
"The market may again start betting on interest rate cuts (in Poland) because earlier when the zloty was weakening we saw some in the market raising doubts about more easing," Maciej Slomka, head of fixed-income trading at Pekao in Warsaw.
Hungarian benchmark bond yields fell partly due to the replacement of earlier benchmarks with longer bonds.
Last week, analysts said in a Reuters poll it would likely get worse for the region's currencies before it gets better. [
]Economic figures continue to point to a grim economic outlook in the export-reliant region hit by the global crisis.
In the Czech Republic, data showed inflation decelerated further in January to 2.2 percent, below the bank's mid-point target. [
]Other data showed the Czech jobless rate jumped by almost a percentage point in January, and Slovakia's industry showed its worst contraction in a decade.
Investors were bracing for a slew of fresh data this week from central Europe's fast slowing economies, including GDP data in Hungary and the Czech Republic.
"The surprise potential is rather limited," said Ulrich Leuchtmann, head of foreign exchange research at Commerzbank in Frankfurt. "Everybody knows we are heading for a rather steep economic slowdown." ----------------------MARKET SNAPSHOT------------------------- Currency Latest Previous Local Local
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today in 2009 Czech crown <EURCZK=> 27.545 28.042 +1.8% -2.88% Polish zloty <EURPLN=> 4.418 4.548 +2.94% -6.86% Hungarian forint <EURHUF=> 286.85 288.65 +0.63% -8.12% Croatian kuna <EURHRK=> 7.423 7.406 -0.23% -0.78% Romanian leu <EURRON=> 4.228 4.238 +0.24% -5.05% Serbian dinar <EURRSD=> 92.15 92.14 -0.01% -2.9%
Yield Spreads Czech treasury bonds <0#CZBMK=> 2-yr T-bond CZ2YT=RR -42 basis points to 145bps over bmk* 4-yr T-bond CZ4YT=RR +2 basis points to +116bps over bmk* 8-yr T-bond CZ8YT=RR -3 basis points to +221bps over bmk* Polish treasury bonds <0#PLBMK=> 2-yr T-bond PL2YT=RR -10 basis points to +356bps over bmk* 5-yr T-bond PL5YT=RR -7 basis points to +281bps over bmk* 10-yr T-bond PL10YT=RR -8 basis points to +227bps over bmk* Hungarian treasury bonds <0#HUBMK=> 3-yr T-bond HU3YT=RR -32 basis points to +926bps over bmk* 5-yr T-bond HU5YT=RR -65 basis points to +837bps over bmk* 10-yr T-bond HU10YT=RR -54 basis points to +662bps over bmk* *Benchmark is German bond equivalent. All data taken from Reuters at 1654 CET. Currency percent change calculated from the daily domestic close at 1600 GMT. For related news and prices, click on the codes in brackets: All emerging market news [
] Spot FX rates Eastern Europe spot FX <EEFX=> Middle East spot FX <MEFX=> Asia spot FX <ASIAFX=> Latin America spot FX <LATAMFX=> Other news and reports World central bank news [ ] Economic Data Guide <ECONGUIDE> Official rates [ ] Emerging Diary [ ] Top events [ ] Diaries [ ] Diaries Index [ ] (Reporting by Reuters bureaus, writing by Jason Hovet; Editing by Ruth Pitchford and Toby Chopra)