Turkey’s central bank surprises with 350-basis-point rate hike

Turkey’s central bank surprises with 350-basis-point rate hike


Cityscape at sunset on March 4, 2024 in Istanbul, Turkey.

Dia Images | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Turkey’s central bank surprised markets on Thursday when it raised its key interest rate, the one-week repurchase rate, from 42.5% to 46%, ending the easing cycle it began in December of last year.

The decision comes on the back of economic disruption due to U.S. tariffs and major political unheaval and investor flight following the arrest of Istanbul mayor and opposition leader Ekrem Imamoglu in March.

“The decisiveness regarding tight monetary stance is strengthening the disinflation process through moderation in domestic demand, real appreciation in Turkish lira, and improvement in inflation expectations,” Turkey’s Monetary Policy Committee wrote in the statement accompanying its decision.

The committee cited “potential effects of the rising protectionism in global trade on the disinflation process through global economic activity, commodity prices and capital flows,” and said “the tight monetary stance will be maintained until price stability is achieved via a sustained decline in inflation.”

Annual inflation in Turkey came in at 38.1% in March.  

The rate hike comes in the face of significant foreign currency depletion, as the Turkish central bank spent as much as $25 billion in three days following the arrest of Imamoglu and ensuing protests on March 19 to defend the lira, which briefly ropped to a record low of more 40 to the U.S. dollar. Turkish markets initially plunged on news of the arrest, and the country’s government on March 23 banned short selling and relaxed buyback rules in an effort to bolster stocks. 

Turkey's Erdogan is in a powerful geopolitical position amid arrests of political opponents: analyst

On March 20, the lira drop had prompted the central bank to make a 200-basis-point emergency hike that brought its overnight lending rate to 46.00%, the top of its interest rate corridor.

The Thursday interest rate lift is therefore as a largely technical adjustment following the March developments, according to Brad Bechtel, global head of FX at Jefferies.

“We’ll see what (Turkish President Recep) Erdogan has to say about the central bank’s moves but so far the central bank has done a rather good job navigating the political noise in its continued fight against inflation,” Bechtel wrote in a note following the bank’s Thursday announcement.

The central bank’s move “would formalise the tightening delivered last month and suggests that policymakers have become more concerned about upside risks to inflation,” Nicholas Farr, emerging Europe economist at Capital Economics, wrote in analysis on Thursday.

The monetary committee’s statement “highlighted the risks from a weaker lira, and that policymakers would closely monitor capital flows amid the current uncertainty around US trade protectionism,” Farr wrote.

Capital Economics’ analysts assess inflation in Turkey is on a downward trajectory in the coming months, and do not see further tightening in store.

“But it’s clear,” the note added, “that the central bank’s easing cycle has hit a major roadblock, and it could take some time before the easing cycle is restarted. We now forecast the one-week repo rate to end the year at 40.00% (previously 35.00%).”



Source

AI could be causing ‘quiet time’ in labor market, top Trump economic aide Hassett says
World

AI could be causing ‘quiet time’ in labor market, top Trump economic aide Hassett says

Artificial intelligence could be increasing worker productivity so much that companies slow hiring, top Trump administration economic advisor Kevin Hassett said Monday. “I think that there have been mixed signals in the job market,” the National Economic Council director said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” adding that he has seen “really, really positive signals in the […]

Read More
China slow-walks U.S. soybean purchases as stockpiles hit multi-year highs, undermining Trump’s trade deal claims
World

China slow-walks U.S. soybean purchases as stockpiles hit multi-year highs, undermining Trump’s trade deal claims

China’s imports of U.S. soybeans have shown little sign of rebounding as Beijing’s stockpiles swelled to their highest levels in years, undermining U.S. President Donald Trump’s claims that a recent trade truce would spur major new Chinese purchases. China, the world’s largest consumer of soybeans, has built up a glut of supplies after months of […]

Read More
Emirates bets big on Boeing with  billion order at Dubai Airshow
World

Emirates bets big on Boeing with $38 billion order at Dubai Airshow

A Plane Boeing 777X performs during the Dubai Airshow, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, November 14, 2021. Amr Alfiky | Reuters Emirates said Monday it has placed an order for 65 additional Boeing 777-9 aircraft, worth $38 billion at list prices, on the opening day of Dubai Airshow 2025. Emirates is Boeing’s largest customer in […]

Read More