The Borneo Post

• Turkey rules property sales, rental agreements must be in lira

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ISTANBUL: Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan ruled that property sales and rental agreements must be made in lira, putting an end to such deals in foreign currencies, in a fresh step to support the ailing local currency.

The decision, published in Turkey’s Official Gazette on Thursday, said that sales contracts and rental agreements in foreign currency must be converted into lira within 30 days.

Real estate sale and rental deals in foreign currency are common in Turkey, particular­ly in the retail sector.

The lira has lost some 40 per cent of its value against the dollar this year over concerns about Erdogan’s influence on monetary policy and a diplomatic spat between Turkey and the United States.

Erdogan, who has declared himself an enemy of high interest rates, has cast the lira crisis as an ‘economic war’ targeting Turkey and has repeatedly urged Turks to sell their dollar savings to shore up the lira.

Turkey’s central bank meets on Thursday and is expected to raise interest rates to support the lira. According to a Reuters poll, the benchmark rate is expected to be hiked by 225 to 725 basis points.

The decision on transactio­ns also included contracts for business and services. The contracts cannot be agreed in foreign currency or indexed to a foreign currency, according to the Official Gazette.

It was the latest in a series of steps Turkey has taken since August to choke dollar demand. The central bank has launched a forex swap market for banks, while the banking watchdog limited derivative transactio­ns.

It has also required Turkish exporters to convert the bulk of their overseas revenue into lira.

Against expectatio­ns, the central bank did not raise rates at its last meeting in July. Since then, the lira has lost some 25 per cent of its value and data last week showed annual inflation surged to 17.9 per cent in August.

 ?? — Reuters photio ?? Turkish lira banknotes are pictured at a currency exchange office in Istanbul, Turkey.
— Reuters photio Turkish lira banknotes are pictured at a currency exchange office in Istanbul, Turkey.

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