It was a political earthquake heard across Europe, and markets responded immediately.
On April 13, Hungary’s forint (1) rose about 2% against the euro and about 1.6% against the dollar, hitting near multi-year highs, in the wake of one of the continent’s most stunning upsets.
Péter Magyar’s Tisza party won (2) a landslide, defeating Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s government and ending his 16-year rule with the country’s highest voter turnout (3) in decades. The result (4), which handed Tisza a two-thirds supermajority, was considered (5) the “most EU-friendly and market-friendly” outcome for election day.
Budapest’s BUX stock index (6) surged as much as 4.6% on the news, according to Bloomberg, even as broader global markets were weighed down by geopolitical tensions elsewhere.
For investors, the question now is whether this rally has legs or whether the euphoria is getting ahead of reality.
Magyar has made unlocking EU funds (7) a central platform of his plan to reignite Hungary’s economy, which has been in near-stagnation (8) for the past three years. That’s a big deal.
Around €18 billion ($21 billion) in EU funding (9) has been suspended over democratic governance concerns, a sum that works out to roughly 8% of Hungary’s anticipated GDP for the year, according to Reuters via MarketScreener.
The constitutional weight of Magyar’s win also matters. Securing a parliamentary supermajority gave Magyar the ability (10) to amend Hungary’s constitution and dismantle Fidesz control: Orbán used his years of supermajority rule to hollow out judicial independence, redraw the electoral system and restrict minority rights, CNN (11) notes.
Goldman Sachs analysts flagged (12) the longer-term financial upside in a post-election note cited by Global Banking & Finance Review.
“Tisza has committed to meeting the Maastricht criteria by 2030 to prepare for eventual Euro area accession,” they said, adding that “One of the first steps in a euro convergence program would be to lower Hungary’s inflation target from 3% currently to the Euro area’s 2%.”