(Repeats story published late on Tuesday)
* Forint, stocks rally lead FX higher, aid bonds
* Hungary c.bank talks up forint, may have intervened
* Leu edges up as Romania closer to IMF deal
By Marius Zaharia and Jason Hovet
BUCHAREST/PRAGUE, March 10 (Reuters) - The forint led gains in central Europe on Tuesday after Hungary's central bank said it was actively supporting the forint and Romania sought aid to ride out the global crisis.
The forint jumped more than 2 percent over Monday levels in the late afternoon, pushing the Polish zloty higher and the Czech crown -- the region's best performer this year -- to a two-month high as a rally in stocks added to gains.
Hungarian central bank Governor Andras Simor signalled in a TV interview that the bank was actively supporting the forint currency, though he would not say how and in what amounts the bank had bought forints.[
]The pledge followed a weekend statement saying the bank would channel European Union funds into the market and pump euro liquidity into the banking system to prop up the forint, which sank to a record low of 317.45 to the euro last week.
The Hungarian forint <EURHUF=> firmed 1.9 percent to 304.3 to the euro by 1602 GMT, but has lost 13.9 percent this year, outpacing up to 12 percent losses for the region.
"It's hard to say anything, I can only make guesses," a local dealer said, giving a 70 percent probability the central bank had bought forints. "We haven't seen the (central bank) and we saw interest from hedge funds to buy the forint."
In Poland, the zloty <EURPLN=> gained 1.4 percent and the Czech crown <EURCZK=> rose 1.7 percent, helping lift bond prices, dealers said. The leu <EURRON=> gained just 0.3 percent to 4.287 to the euro, with dealers saying only the size of any IMF-led aid deal was likely to benefit the Romanian unit.
Central European stocks jumped, riding a boost in global sentiment after news banking giant Citigroup <C.N> was profitable to start 2009. [
]Policymakers have become more vocal in support of currencies that have dropped sharply in 2009 as the global economic slowdown punishes central Europe's export-heavy economies.
On Monday, Poland's central bank said it was ready to intervene if needed to prop up the zloty. Last month it sold EU funds on the market when the zloty neared a record low.
ON THE GROUND
Capital flows to emerging Europe that once fuelled booming growth have reversed, putting strain on many countries. In Tuesday note, Merrill Lynch analysts estimated the region would need combined gross external financing of $460 billion in 2009.
Romania said on Tuesday it had started talks with the European Commission, the International Monetary Fund and other institutions to seek "medium-term foreign financial assistance", a bailout which economists said could reach 20 billion euros.
"The leu would have firmed on the IMF news, had it depreciated in line with the region in the past," one dealer said, adding news on the size of the deal could be a mover.
"The market is pricing in 5-10 billion euros, but if (Romania) gets 20 billion euros, the leu should rally."
Dealers have said the central bank has sold euros in the market in this year, helping the unit fare better than peers.
An IMF team was due to start a two-week visit to Bucharest on Wednesday to discuss a potential loan programme. President Traian Basescu told Parliament on Monday a foreign loan was the only solution to aid the troubled economy. [
]"The package should ease fears of a complete financial meltdown in Romania," Neil Shearing, emerging European economist at Capital Economics, said in a note.
"More generally, an IMF rescue package does not alter the fact that the leu remains fundamentally overvalued."
Hungary secured a $25 billion IMF-EU package in October, becoming the first EU member to get aid. Analysts have speculated for weeks that Romania would become the third bloc member -- after Hungary and Latvia -- to get help.
Unlike Latvia, Romania has not experienced large street protests but analysts believe social pressures will continue to mount, threatening the new government coalition's stability.
Policymakers have repeatedly stated over the past weeks that currencies were undervalued, and stronger countries like the Czech Republic and Poland have tried distancing themselves from neighbours' problems. But analysts predict further FX weakening.
"The previous flow of capital is turning into an ebb which is fundamentally what will maintain pressure on currencies," Swedish bank SEB's chief emerging markets strategist Mats Olausson said.
----------------------MARKET SNAPSHOT------------------------- Currency Latest Previous Local Local
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today in 2009 Czech crown <EURCZK=> 27.084 27.543 +1.69% -1.22% Polish zloty <EURPLN=> 4.673 4.736 +1.35% -11.94% Hungarian forint <EURHUF=> 304.3 309.95 +1.86% -13.39% Croatian kuna <EURHRK=> 7.437 7.45 +0.17% -0.97% Romanian leu <EURRON=> 4.287 4.3 +0.3% -6.36% Serbian dinar <EURRSD=> 94.238 94.228 -0.01% -5.05% Yield Spreads Czech treasury bonds <0#CZBMK=> 2-yr T-bond CZ2YT=RR +12 basis points to 237bps over bmk* 4-yr T-bond CZ4YT=RR -14 basis points to +248bps over bmk* 8-yr T-bond CZ8YT=RR -24 basis points to +301bps over bmk* Polish treasury bonds <0#PLBMK=> 2-yr T-bond PL2YT=RR -11 basis points to +444bps over bmk* 5-yr T-bond PL5YT=RR -14 basis points to +393bps over bmk* 10-yr T-bond PL10YT=RR -13 basis points to +334bps over bmk* Hungarian treasury bonds <0#HUBMK=> 3-yr T-bond HU3YT=RR -16 basis points to +1229bps over bmk* 5-yr T-bond HU5YT=RR -19 basis points to +1096bps over bmk* 10-yr T-bond HU10YT=RR +13 basis points to +924bps over bmk* *Benchmark is German bond equivalent. All data taken from Reuters at 1707 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 Marius Zaharia/Jason Hovet; Editing by Stephen Nisbet)