Analysts said April inflation data backed a view of no more rate hikes. "Inflation could fall even faster as cost conditions are improving," Banka Creditas economist Petr Dufek said, citing easing gas prices and weakened demand as examples. Food prices rose 17.3% in April and electricity prices - which had been a big driver behind last year's surge in inflation - also slowed their growth on a year-on-year basis. Headline inflation had hit a three-decade peak of 18% in September last year, and the central bank forecasts it at single-digit rates in the second half of the year. Forward rate agreements expect around 50 basis points in interest rate cuts by the end of the year. Interest rates around central Europe have been put on hold at elevated levels. Hungary's central bank, battling inflation over 20%, cut the top of its interest rate corridor last month, paving the way for eventual rate cuts.
Poland's central bank left its main interest rate on hold at
6.75% on Wednesday, maintaining a view that slowing growth will
help curb inflation.
($1 = 21.2420 Czech crowns)
(Reporting by Jason Hovet in Prague; Editing by Angus MacSwan)