Arab Times

With some luck, Turkish lira defies doubters – for now

Currency stormed back since May thanks to Fed, Trump

-

ISTANBUL, Aug 6, (RTRS): Turkey’s lira has risen in recent months despite Ankara abruptly sacking the central bank governor and risking US sanctions over Russian missiles, silencing for now critics who had warned such moves could cause another currency crisis.

The lira has been a fortunate beneficiar­y of the US Federal Reserve’s shift to a more supportive stance, which has boosted emerging markets, especially relatively cheap Turkish assets, since the currency hit an eight-month low in May.

An escalation this week in the USChina trade war and Beijing’s devaluatio­n of the yuan could prompt the Fed to do yet more to weaken the dollar, giving the lira room to run.

Investors and Turkish officials who were preparing for the worst in the spring have also been pleasantly surprised by US President Donald Trump’s reluctance to punish NATO ally Ankara for accepting delivery of Russian S-400 defences last month.

Those two plot twists have provided unexpected cover as the Middle East’s largest economy claws its way out of recession, and as President Tayyip Erdogan recovers from shock local election losses by his ruling party.

Turkey’s lira is by far the strongest https://tmsnrt.rs/2Yof7ue emerging market currency so far this quarter, while its bond returns have jumped https://tmsnrt.rs/2KkjsER from among the worst earlier this year to among the best.

Its prospects now depend on whether yield-hungry investors will keep ignoring the global trade war and buying riskier assets, as well as Turkish authoritie­s’ ability to restore trust in the central bank, shore up debt-laden banks and companies and halt a trend of Turks turning to more stable foreign cash.

Emerging

“People are piling into the lira,” said Cristian Maggio, head of emerging markets strategy at TD Securities.

“The main factor is external and the Fed being on a path of monetary easing ... and Turkey stands out as the main beneficiar­y of that.”

The lira was worth 5.53 per dollar on Tuesday, about 10% stronger than the 6.19 in early May, when Goldman Sachs, Societe Generale and others predicted it would slide toward 6.60 and even 7.00 by year end.

Those prediction­s – which could still prove correct – would throw the currency back to levels hit in last year’s crisis, prompted by concerns over central bank independen­ce and a diplomatic spat with the United States.

The lira at its nadir last year shed half its value against the dollar, sending inflation soaring above 25% in October.

Another sell-off this spring echoed 2018, as investors again fretted that the central bank would not keep policy tight enough to support the lira.

A fresh diplomatic squabble also brewed, with US officials warning that economic sanctions would be triggered if Ankara did not scrap its S-400 deal with NATO foe Russia.

But after Trump came away from a meeting with Erdogan in June saying Turkey had been treated unfairly, the Turkish president called Washington’s – and the markets’ – bluff, and Turkey began receiving the S-400s within two weeks.

In another defiant move, Erdogan fired central bank governor Murat Cetinkaya for not following instructio­ns to ease policy.

The central bank under its new chief followed through with Turkey’s biggest rate cut since at least 2003, again stoking worries about independen­ce.

But the lira only briefly wobbled and has led a group of 29 emerging market currencies since July 1, with nearly double the gains of the second-placed Israeli shekel.

Since June 23, when Erdogan’s AK Party lost a high-stakes re-run of Istanbul’s mayoral election, Turkish bonds have returned 4.2%, the second best in JP Morgan’s EMBI emerging markets index. Capital flows have also turned around https://tmsnrt.rs/2MLf0BR with $3 billion arriving in June, according to the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance.

Decline

Cetinkaya’s sacking and the sharp rate cut “signals a decline in the credibilit­y and independen­ce of the central bank, which increases macroecono­mic risks going forward,” said former Fed economist Selva Demiralp, now at Istanbul’s Koc University.

“But market players saw an opportunit­y to take advantage of cheap bond prices in the short run.” She said the lira could weaken if there are more rate cuts and the government fails to agree a bad debt bailout.

Reuters reported last month that plans have stalled to relieve banks of some $20 billion in loans that constructi­on and energy companies can no longer afford.

Other risks loom for Turkey’s $766 billion economy, which is expected to contract this year.

A year-long trend of “dollarisat­ion” has not abated, with a near-record 53% of accounts holding foreign currencies in mid-July, suggesting Turks are unconvince­d by the lira’s rally.

Ratings agency S&P said that just 11% of government bonds now held by foreigners “the fate of the Turkish lira relies far more on the sentiment of Turkish resident households.”

Foreign investors have been squeezed by state banks that in March withheld lira liquidity from London’s overnight swap market, often used to hedge positions, and again in May when they sold billions of dollars in internatio­nal markets.

Those and other government moves, which some saw as steps toward capital controls, have raised costs for foreigners betting against Turkish assets and for Turks buying dollars and euros.

Reuters has not reported any state bank interventi­ons since May, though some investors say it remains a possibilit­y especially given recent lira strength.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait