By Leos Rousek
TODAY'S CALENDAR
Local/GMT
N/A Polish copper miner KGHM first-quarter earnings
N/A Polish PKO Bank Polski first-quarter earnings
All day Czech, Polish, Hungarian, Slovakian PMs,
NATO chief at security forum
0900/0700 Czech, Slovak, Hungarian first-quarter GDP
preliminary readings
1000/0800 Polish first-quarter GDP preliminary reading
1000/0800 Czech March current account
1400/1200 Polish April core inflation
1400/1200 Polish March current account
2400/2200 Hungary OTP Bank first-quarter earnings
All four main Central European economies will be releasing their
first-quarter gross domestic product readings Thursday and analysts
expect all countries to post solid growth rates, underscoring a
wider economic rebound in Europe.
In Poland, the region's largest country in population terms, the
annual GDP growth is seen accelerating to 3.1% in the three months
to the end of March from 2.7% in the previous quarter. The Czech
economy, the region's wealthiest nation in per capita income terms,
is expected to expand 2.4% annually in the first quarter after
rising 1.3% in the final three months of 2013.
Slovakia and Hungary, the two smaller Central European
economies, are likely to show stagnating but still good GDP growth
rates.
Analysts expect the Hungarian and Slovak GDP annual expansion
rates at 2.7% and 1.5%, respectively, or same as in the final
quarter of last year.
In Warsaw, Poland's largest lender by assets, Powszechna Kasa
Oszczednosci Bank Polski SA. (PKO.WA) is expected to report a rise
of 3.4% on the year rise of its first quarter net profit to 807
million zlotys ($264 million), benefiting from the country's
accelerating economy.
The country's copper miner KGHM Polska Miedz S.A. (KGH.WA) is
expected to report a 46% drop in earnings 572 million zlotys ($187
million) in the first quarter on lower sales volumes and copper
prices.
In Bratislava prime ministers of all four Central European
nations are due to meet Anders Rasmussen, the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization's secretary-general. Talks will center on security
issues in the region and Europe posed by Russia's interference in
Ukraine's domestic politics.
FOREX
EUR/CZK
Latest 0150 GMT 27.455-78
Previous 2150 GMT 27.450-83
%Chg 0.00%
EUR/HUF
Latest 0150 GMT 303.23-46
Previous 2150 GMT 303.23-71
% Chg -0.04
EUR/PLN
Latest 0150 GMT 4.1868-904
Previous 2150 GMT 4.1877-921
% Chg -0.03
FIXED INCOME
Hungary
Wed Tue
3 yrs 3.71% 3.86%
5 yrs 4.02% 4.16%
10yrs 5.00% 5.14%
Poland
Wed Tue
3 yrs 2.83% 2.88%
5 yrs 3.17% 3.25%
10yrs 3.80% 3.82%
Czech Republic
Wed Tue
3 yrs 0.32% 0.34%
5 yrs 0.68% 0.72%
10yrs 1.69% 1.73%
STOCKS
WIG 20
2421.49 +8.26 +0.3%
BUX
18277.55 +142.46 +0.8%
PX
987.48 -6.50 -0.6%
OTHER NEWS
UKRAINE: Many big hedge funds that invest in Russia and the
surrounding region have suffered steep losses amid escalating
tensions in Ukraine. With their flexibility to bet for and against
stocks and bonds, hedge funds typically trumpet their ability to
make money in rising and falling markets. But Ukraine has caught
some of them out.
UKRAINE: -The escalating confrontation between Ukraine and
Russia is inflicting severe pain on both economies and risks
derailing the recovery in Eastern Europe and parts of the former
Soviet Union this year, the region's leading development bank said
Wednesday. The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, a
multilateral development lender established in 1991 to help
ex-communist countries transition from central planning to market
economies, more than halved its 2014 growth forecast for the
nations of the former Soviet Union, Eastern Europe and Turkey to
1.3%, from 2.8% in January.
UKRAINE: A provisional price for Russian natural gas could be
negotiated with Ukraine by the end of the month in a bid to avert a
potential disruption of gas supplies, the European Union's energy
chief said Wednesday.
RUSSIA: -Western sanctions are starting to hit Russia and more
sanctions will follow if Moscow continues to destabilize Ukraine
and prevent presidential elections from taking place on May 25, a
senior U.S. official said Wednesday. U.S. Assistant Secretary of
State for European and Eurasian Affairs Victoria Nuland said Russia
was losing capital as a result of the West's response to Moscow's
annexation of Crimea and support for separatists in the east of
Ukraine.
POLAND: -Poland's lower-than-expected consumer price inflation
for April was likely a one-off due to low food prices compared with
March, said Anna Zielinska-Glebocka, member of Poland's 10-strong
rates panel.
HUNGARY: Hungary's parliament, in its first decision in the new
term, this week passed a bill to extend an eviction moratorium for
foreign-currency mortgage debtors. The moratorium, which also
involves debtors who are late with their loan payback, will be in
place until the government works out a solution for all households
with debts in foreign currencies. The current law only affects
debtors who haven't got anywhere else to stay, but gives no value
limit on properties in question.
ROMANIA: Romanian state-run nuclear power company
Nuclearelectrica (SNN.RO) on Wednesday said its net profit fell 30%
on the year to 101.8 million lei ($31.4 million) in the first
quarter, hurt by lower revenues from electricity sales, news agency
Mediafax reports.
Marcin Sobczyk in Warsaw and Veronika Gulyas in Budapest
contributed to this article.
Write to Leos Rousek at leos.rousek@wsj.com
Go to http://blogs.wsj.com/emergingeurope for the new WSJ and
Dow Jones blog on Central and Eastern Europe, covering business,
politics, society and more, written by our correspondents across
the region.