The Niagara Falls Review

Turkey’s currency continues its nosedive

Dispute with U.S. adds to pressure on emerging market

- SUZAN FRASER

ANKARA, TURKEY — Turkey’s central bank took action Monday to free up cash for banks as the country continued to grapple with a currency crisis sparked by concerns over President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s economic policies and a trade and diplomatic dispute with the United States.

The Turkish lira has nosedived over the past week and tumbled another 7 per cent on Monday as the central bank’s measures failed to restore investor confidence.

The uncertaint­y pushed down world stock markets and briefly caused a sharp drop in the currencies of other emerging economies, like South Africa and India, amid concerns that the financial trouble could spread.

The lira hit a record low of 7.23 per dollar late Sunday after Erdogan remained defiant in his economic policies and the standoff against the U.S., a NATO ally.

“Turkey is faced with an economic siege,” Erdogan said Monday, in the latest of a series of speeches. “We are taking the necessary steps against these attacks and will continue to do so.”

He has threatened to seek new alliances — a veiled hint at closer ties with Russia — and warned of drastic measures if businesses withdraw foreign currency from banks.

Erdogan also ruled out the possibilit­y of higher interest rates, as they can slow economic growth. But independen­t analysts say higher rates are needed urgently to stabilize the currency and Erdogan’s hard line is one of the reasons investors are worrying.

Erdogan won a second term in office in June under a new system of government that gives him sweeping powers. He has used his new power to pressure the central bank not to raise rates.

On Monday, the central bank announced a series of measures to “provide all the liquidity the banks need” — but offered no hint of a rate increase.

The moves are meant to grease the financial system, ease worries about trouble at banks and keep them providing loans to people and businesses.

Simon Derrick, chief currency strategist at BNY Mellon, said the central bank’s measures are unlikely to be enough. In the absence of a decisive rate increase, he said, “it is ... hard to look at these announceme­nts as being anything more than temporary calming measures, rather than solutions to the problems at hand.”

The lira has now dropped some 45 per cent this year.

Part of the concerns about Turkey are the same as other emerging markets. As interest rates rise in the U.S., investors pull their money out of countries that had enjoyed strong economic growth but are perceived as somewhat riskier.

Turkey’s situation is among the most precarious among emerging markets because so much of its growth was fuelled with debt in foreign currencies. That makes the currency drop so much more painful as it will increase the cost of servicing debt for Turkish companies and banks and could lead to bankruptci­es.

Among the most important things investors are watching out for is whether Turkey, in an effort to stymie the outflow of capital from the country, puts limits on money flows.

Berat Albayrak, Turkey’s finance chief — and Erdogan’s son-in-law — said Sunday that the government had no plans to seize foreign currency deposits or convert deposits to the Turkish lira. He said it had readied an “action plan,” without elaboratin­g.

The country’s economic trouble has been heightened by a dispute with the U.S. that has centred on the continued detention of an American pastor who is on trial for espionage and terror-related charges.

The U.S. has responded by slapping financial sanctions on two ministers and later doubled steel and aluminum tariffs on Turkey.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says his country is under an economic "siege" that has nothing to do with its economic indicators.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says his country is under an economic "siege" that has nothing to do with its economic indicators.

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