In 2015, Hungary's currency situation was characterized by a period of deliberate devaluation and unconventional monetary policy under the National Bank of Hungary (MNB), led by Governor György Matolcsy. The central bank's primary tool was a series of interest rate cuts and a unique "funding for growth" scheme, which aimed to boost lending to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) by providing cheap credit using bank reserves. This expansive policy, while stimulating domestic demand, placed sustained downward pressure on the Hungarian forint (HUF) throughout much of the year. The forint weakened significantly against the euro, reaching historic lows beyond 315 HUF/EUR in the first half of 2015, a deliberate move to enhance export competitiveness and reduce the burden of foreign-currency household debt.
This weak currency policy existed within a complex economic context. Hungary had successfully exited its IMF/EU financial assistance program in 2013, but the government maintained a focus on reducing public debt and achieving economic sovereignty. The forint's depreciation helped economic growth, which was robust at nearly 3% in 2015, but it also imported inflation and increased the cost of servicing the government's own foreign-denominated debt. Furthermore, the MNB's policies, particularly the use of bank reserves for targeted lending, drew criticism from some analysts and the European Central Bank for blurring the lines between monetary and fiscal policy and potentially undermining central bank independence.
By the latter part of 2015, external factors began to shift the dynamic. The anticipation and eventual announcement of quantitative easing (QE) by the European Central Bank weakened the euro globally, which paradoxically allowed the forint to stabilize and even recover some strength to around 310 HUF/EUR by year-end. This shift, combined with low global oil prices keeping inflation in check, provided the MNB room to continue its loose monetary stance. Thus, 2015 closed with a currency that had weathered deliberate weakness but was finding a fragile equilibrium, setting the stage for a gradual normalization of policy in the following years.