Arab Times

Post-election policy moves now key for Turkey: Fitch

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LONDON, June 12, (RTRS): Turkey’s sovereign rating can ride out the current market turbulence if authoritie­s there move to address the economy’s main weaknesses after upcoming presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections, Fitch said on Monday.

Fitch has a ‘junk’ BB+ rating on Turkey’s foreign currency debt, but an investment grade BBB- on domestic bonds which is two notches higher than both S&P Global and Moody’s.

Unlike Moody’s, which has just issued a downgrade warning, both Fitch’s ratings also have ‘stable’ outlooks meaning cuts aren’t on the immediate horizon.

There are obvious stresses though. Turkey’s central bank has just hiked interest rates more than 4 percentage points to stem a run on the lira triggered by concerns about political interferen­ce in monetary policy, a high current account deficit and even higher inflation.

President Tayyip Erdogan, a selfprocla­imed “enemy of interest rates”, has stepped up pressure on the central bank before presidenti­al and parliament­ary polls on June 24.

“They have dealt with some of the near-term stresses but we still have the uncertaint­y about political influence over monetary policy,” Paul Gamble, Fitch’s top ‘emerging’ Europe sovereign analyst told Reuters.

“And more broadly the fact monetary policy has been unable to get inflation to anywhere near the inflation target... That is a long-standing weakness.”

Turkey is the only BB bracket country rated by Fitch where inflation is currently in double-digits. On the flip side it has much lower debt than most, either as a percentage of GDP or as a share of annual government revenue.

“The rate hikes were in line with our scenario,” Gamble said, adding that a tandem move to also bring 4 different Turkish interest rates closer together had been “useful” as well.

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