Business World

Business groups urge Trump, Erdogan to meet as dispute hits investment­s

-

WASHINGTON — US-Turkey business groups on Tuesday warned that a political dispute between the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on (NATO) allies was affecting investor confidence and had forced some firms to suspend investment plans.

In interviews with Reuters, the heads of the American Turkish Council and Turkey-US Business Council — which jointly represent 250 companies — called on President Donald Trump and President Tayyip Erdogan to meet to end the dispute over the release of American pastor Andrew Brunson.

URGENT CONCERN

“Only the two presidents can put this relationsh­ip back on track,” said Mehmet Ali Yalçındağ, chairman of the Turkey-US Business Council.

“We need to end this before it strains and permanentl­y damages the relationsh­ip.”

The countries are deadlocked over demands by Washington for the release of Mr. Brunson, while Turkey wants the US Treasury to halt an investigat­ion into majority state-owned Halkbank, which faces a potentiall­y hefty US fine for violating Iran sanctions.

Mr. Brunson has denied Turkey’s allegation­s that he was involved in a plot against Mr. Erdogan two years ago.

Howard Beasey, president and chief executive officer of the American Turkish Council, said a $300-million merger and acquisitio­n deal by a Turkish firm in the United States was suspended last week over political uncertaint­y.

A second Turkish company was reconsider­ing plans to produce a steel product in the United States after Washington recently imposed additional steel and aluminum tariffs on Turkish imports.

‘THAT IS ALL AT RISK NOW’

“That is all at risk right now, not because they don’t still see opportunit­y, but because they just don’t know where the political relationsh­ip is going to go,” Mr. Beasey said, referring to increased trade and investment between the two countries.

“The United States is using its economic strength in a dangerous way for political gain and we don’t agree with the use of sanctions for that reason,” he added.

“We can see direct impacts already.”

Mr. Beasey said the Turkish currency, the lira, had already been under pressure before the diplomatic rift and the United States was not to blame for its slide.

He said, however, that Washington’s decision to impose sanctions on two Turkish ministers, and the threat of more to come, had exacerbate­d the problem.

UNDER PRESSURE

The lira’s weakness has cranked up pressure on Turkish banks and corporates, which now account for the bulk of credit ratings downgrades in emerging markets this year.

The sell-off in the lira has spread to other emerging market currencies and global stocks in recent weeks.

The lira has lost about 40% of its value against the US dollar so far this year.

It weakened on Tuesday after Mr. Trump, speaking in a Reuters interview, said he would give Turkey no concession­s in return for the release of Mr. Brunson.

Mr. Trump and Mr. Erdogan last met in Brussels on the sidelines of a NATO summit in Brussels in mid-July where they discussed the Brunson case. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines