Turkey Unexpectedly Hikes Lending Rate In Scramble To Prop Up Crashing Lira

dailyblitz.de 15 hours ago
Zdjęcie: turkey-unexpectedly-hikes-lending-rate-in-scramble-to-prop-up-crashing-lira


Turkey Unexpectedly Hikes Lending Rate In Scramble To Prop Up Crashing Lira

Just as Wall Street had gotten all bulled up on Turkey, urging clients to buy the lira (countless previous rugpulls of carry traders notwithstanding) amid expectations of easing inflation, declining interest rates, and a generally pro-market posture, Erdogan stunned everyone on Wednesday by sparking the biggest meltdown in the currency and Turkish markets in years when he arrested his chief opposition challenger for the presidential post, confirming yet again that Turkey is the biggest banana republic in the emerging market universe by far (because Erdogan believes he is untouchable by Western nations as he has become the most important force in Europe thanks to his massive military, which is the second largest in NATO).

And then, moments ago Turkey pulled shocker number 2 in 24 hours, when the Turkish central bank shocked the market again when it raised its overnight lending rate by two percentage points in a surprise meeting on Thursday to support the lira and mitigate the impact from the currency’s sudden decline on inflation.

The rate hike came a day after the currency lost as much as 11% amid political turmoil triggered by the detention of a major opposition politician. And, as shown in the chart below, it has done absolutely nothing to restore confidence in the policies of this banana republic, with the USDTRY promptly back to where it was before the rate hike.

“Assessing the risks that these developments may pose to the inflation outlook, measures have been taken to support the tight monetary stance,” the bank said in a statement on its website. The “monetary policy stance will be tightened in case a significant and persistent deterioration in inflation is foreseen.”

While policymakers left their benchmark, one-week repo rate unchanged at 42.5%, the increase in the overnight rate to 46% would allow them to raise the average cost of funding they provide to commercial lenders, and help further tighten financial conditions. The move is also meant to make fudning of lira shorts more expensive.

After Turkish assets posted the world’s biggest losses on Wednesday, including an 8% crash in the stock market which triggered a marketwide circuit breaker, markets showed some signs of stabilization on Thursday, largely thanks to $8 billion in USD sales by the central bank meant to prop up the lira. The only problem is that the CBRT is chronically cash-strapped and as such it will be unable maintain intervention once foreigners lose all faith in the local market, where rates paid on FX positions are an unsustainable 42%, yet with inflation running even higher, Turkey has no choice.

“It is the confirmation of the central bank’s credibility and that yesterday’s events are more political than a change in the orthodox policies implemented since 2023,” said Guillaume Tresca, an emerging-markets strategist at Generali Investments, who was clearly long Turkey and was hoping his soothing words would convince someone.

Meanwhile, expectations that the monetary authority could slow down or pause its rate cuts saw investors sell banking shares, with Turkish lenders’ equities dropping as much as 9% on Thursday.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 03/20/2025 – 12:55

Read Entire Article