Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Magyar Nemzeti Bank

2000 Forint (St. Martin of Tours) – Hungary

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: 1700 anniversary of the birth of St. Martin of Tours in Savaria (today's Szombathely, Hungary)
Hungary
Context
Year: 2016
Issuer: Hungary Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1989)
Currency:
(since 1946)
Total mintage: 10,000
Material
Diameter: 37 mm
Weight: 23.7 g
Thickness: 3.2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper-nickel
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard900
Numista: #93329
Value
Exchange value: 2000 HUF = $6.30
Inflation-adjusted value: 3398.80 HUF

Obverse

Description:
St. Martin's Church facade, Szombathely.
Inscription:
MAGYARORSZÁG

2000

FORINT

BP.

2016
Translation:
HUNGARY
2000
FORINT
BUDAPEST
2016
Script: Latin
Language: Hungarian
Engraver: Zoltán Tóth

Reverse

Description:
St. Martin healing a man.
Inscription:
SZENT MÁRTON

SAVARIA A. D. 316
Translation:
Saint Martin

Savaria, A.D. 316
Script: Latin
Languages: Hungarian, Latin
Engraver: Zoltán Tóth

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Hungarian mint

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2016BP10,000BU

Historical background

In 2016, Hungary's currency situation was defined by the National Bank of Hungary's (MNB) unconventional monetary policy aimed at suppressing yields and maintaining a weak forint (HUF). The central bank's primary tool was its "self-financing" strategy, which involved using mandatory reserves and a series of low-interest funding programs to encourage commercial banks to purchase Hungarian government bonds. This effectively kept domestic borrowing costs low for the government, supporting its fiscal policy, while also creating persistent selling pressure on the forint to bolster export competitiveness.

This policy of deliberate forint weakness existed in tension with rising inflation and the specter of U.S. Federal Reserve rate hikes, which typically drive capital away from emerging markets. Throughout the year, the forint was notably volatile, often acting as one of the most sensitive currencies in Central and Eastern Europe to global risk sentiment. It repeatedly tested and breached the psychologically important 310-per-euro level, reaching record lows during periods of market stress, which raised concerns about imported inflation and household mortgage costs for foreign-currency borrowers.

Ultimately, the MNB's priority in 2016 was clear: to ensure cheap financing for the state and stimulate the economy through exports, even at the cost of currency stability and despite inflationary pressures. The year underscored a deliberate policy divergence from traditional inflation-targeting, placing political and economic objectives ahead of a strong or stable national currency. This approach kept Hungary's monetary conditions exceptionally loose throughout 2016, setting the stage for a gradual and cautious policy shift only in the following years as inflation accelerated more sharply.
Rare