ARTIGOS POPULARES

Rabobank’s Global Daily notes the Euro is weaker in early Asian trading despite a decisive victory for Peter Magyar’s pro‑EU Tisza party over Viktor Orban’s Fidesz in Hungary. Michael Every argues Magyar’s win may ease one internal EU obstacle but warns that further EU‑Budapest tensions are likely and broader geopolitical and geoeconomic pressures on Europe remain intense.
Hungarian vote and Euro reaction
"The Euro is 0.32% lower early in the Asian session despite news over the weekend that Peter Magyar’s comparatively pro-EU Tisza party has comprehensively defeated incumbent Viktor Orban’s Fidesz party – securing a two-thirds majority in the 199 seat parliament."
"Ironically, in the weekend’s Hungarian election result Brussels and EU capitals may see parallels to 1956’s Hungarian Uprising."
"Magyar’s defeat of Orban potentially removes a major internal obstacle to EU efforts to deal with the conflux of geopolitical and geoeconomic crises plaguing it."
"That said, Magyar is hardly a Eurocrat."
"Further EU-Budapest tensions may yet lie ahead, while Czechia and Slovakia are still Orban-esque in their own right."
(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)













