Republic of Turkey EUR 2025 3,25% XS1629918415

Turkish banks should boost sectors promoting long-term economic growth -watchdog
Oggi 09:55 - RSF
ISTANBUL, May 30 (Reuters) - Turkey's banking sector needs to prioritize sectors that will have a long term contribution to the economy, the country's banking watchdog Chairman Mehmet Ali Akben said on Monday.

In a speech at a banks association meeting, Akben also said he believed banks will increase credit operations that are in line with government policies that aim to stabilise the lira currency and cool inflation.

(Reporting by Ebru Tuncay and Can Sezer; Editing by Jonathan Spicer)
((ezgi.erkoyun@thomsonreuters.com; +90-212-350 7051; Reuters Messaging: ezgi.erkoyun.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net;))
 
ANALYSIS-Turkey's recurring currency nightmare strikes again
Oggi 09:00 - RSF
* Latest lira slump triggers new worries in Turkey
* Inflation pressures rising again
* Key test ahead for emergency measures brought in last year

By Marc Jones
LONDON, May 30 (Reuters) - Another 9% plunge in Turkey's lira this month and debt market danger gauges at levels last seen during the 2008 global crash have prompted investor concerns that a fresh crisis might be brewing in the country.

Whether President Tayyip Erdogan's government can avoid market turmoil, just five months after the last bout, will have big implications for his re-election prospects - and for a potential return of foreign investment if he loses.

The latest lira slump - it is down 20% this year
- combined with soaring global energy and food prices means inflation is now at 70% and rising, while emergency measures Ankara adopted at the height of last year's turmoil are about to be seriously tested.

Authorities managed to avert a full-blown implosion in December by selling currency reserves and creating special bank accounts protecting savers and corporates from large lira falls in an effort to discourage hoarding of U.S. dollars, euros or gold.

But the appeal of these accounts, known as KKM, could be waning as critical summer 'rollover' dates approach. Meanwhile, the central bank's net reserves have tumbled to a negative $55 billion once FX 'swap' deals with Turkey's domestic banks are accounted for.

"Turkey is not a dead certainty for a big crisis but the odds of one are a long, long way from zero," said abrdn fund manager Kieran Curtis. "They are at risk of losing control of the situation".

Erdogan's government says fallout from the war in Ukraine has delayed efforts to balance the current account with a combination of credit, exports and targeted investments. The central bank says inflation will cool by year-end.

Still, the sky-high energy and food prices, along with the lira's drop and 50% domestic lending growth, are driving inflation towards triple digits. However on Thursday the central bank left interest rates untouched at 14%. (news)

There are also renewed concerns about Turkey's testy relationship with the West after Erdogan said he would veto bids by Finland and Sweden to join NATO, accusing them of harbouring people linked to outlawed Kurdish separatists. (news)


SUMMER TESTS
Top Western investment banks fear further falls in Turkey's currency reserves. Citi sees energy and food imports pushing the current account gap to 5% of national output, though rebounding tourism should net some $15-$20 billion. (news)

Investors are increasingly focused on whether individuals and companies will stick with the FX-protected KKM accounts.

The government and central bank don't publish detailed data about the programme. Calculations of four Turkish economists who ran the sums for Reuters show about $10 billion worth of deposits are up for redemption in July and another $20 billion in August.

JPMorgan's Zafar Nazim said it is "essential" to sustain depositors' interest in this scheme, amid deeply negative real rates. Ankara might therefore decide to let firms deposit more into KKM accounts and possibly offer new tax breaks - though that could create more problems, others believe.

"I don't think it is sustainable. You cannot just offer anyone a payout to protect against currency weakness," said Daniel Moreno, head of emerging markets debt at Mirabaud, which sold its last remaining Turkey bonds during last year's turmoil.

"(Things) seem to be getting worse by the day. But Turkey is not going to go down without a fight."

ELECTION FEVER
Few foreign investors remain big holders of Turkey's bonds following its problems in recent years. In a bid to turn things around, the government has been floating the idea of FX-protected bonds, but money managers worry capital controls might at some point trap them. (news)

The market strains have exacerbated the woes of ordinary Turks, and households are struggling to pay rapidly rising bills, setting the stage for an unpredictable election due no later than June 2023.

Polls show Erdogan recovering some ground lost during the winter and his ruling AK Party remains ahead of rivals. But his approval ratings are near multi-year lows and surveys suggest he could lose his parliamentary majority and perhaps even the presidency to an opposition coalition.

Foreign investors say Erdogan's exit would flash a bullish signal by raising the prospect of a return to more orthodox economic policies.

"The whole investability of Turkey hinges on the election outcome," said Petar Atanasov at emerging market fund Gramercy.

The investor exodus under Erdogan, especially since a 2016 coup attempt, has prompted more inward-looking policies, economists say.

Turkey's credit rating has slumped and its weight in the most closely-followed local currency emerging market debt index GBI-EM dropped to 1% from 10%.

Atanasov said most international investors were hoping for a change of leadership and policy, including a return to rate hikes, but that Erdogan would do his best to stay in power.

"The market will be quite sceptical until the very end," Atanasov said. "It will be an election that is extremely unclear - anything could happen."


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(Additional reporting by Nevzat Devranoglu; Editing by Jonathan Spicer and Gareth Jones)
((marc.jones@thomsonreuters.com; +44 (0)20 7513 4042; Reuters Messaging: marc.jones.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net Twitter @Marcjonesrtrs))
 
Turkey says exports, tourism to support economic growth this year
Oggi 10:51 - RSF
ISTANBUL, May 31 (Reuters) - Turkey's ministry of finance said on Tuesday that strong exports and a boost from tourism in the first quarter will continue the rest of the year and support overall economic growth.

The ministry published the statement after official data showed the economy grew 7.3% year-over-year in the first quarter.

(Reporting by Ezgi Erkoyun; Editing by Jonathan Spicer)
((ezgi.erkoyun@thomsonreuters.com; +90-212-350 7051; Reuters Messaging: ezgi.erkoyun.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net;))
 
UPDATE 2-Turkish economic growth surges 7.3% in Q1 but set to cool
Oggi 11:50 - RSF
(Adds details and comment)
ISTANBUL, May 31 (Reuters) - Strong demand, manufacturing and exports helped Turkey post slightly better than expected 7.3% annual economic growth in the first quarter, data released on Tuesday showed, though fallout from a currency crisis cast a shadow over the rest of the year.

The economy has paid a price for President Tayyip Erdogan's pro-growth policies, as unorthodox interest rate cuts have undermined the lira currency - it has lost 20% against the greenback this year, and 44% last year - and inflation has soared to 70%.

Yet the banking sector expanded by 24.2% annually in the first quarter, while information and communication services grew 16.8%, helping drive overall growth, and the government expects the economy to get a further boost from tourism and exports ovedr the year. (news)

Separate data showed that the trade deficit almost doubled in April, driven by a 135% jump in energy imports. In the Jan-April period it widened by 130% year-on-year. (news)

Economists said the monetary easing, which cut the policy rate down to 14%, would end up hurting economic growth due to inflation running out of control and the widening current account deficit.

Yet in the first quarter, gross domestic product (GDP) expanded 1.2% compared with the previous quarter on a seasonally and calendar-adjusted basis, data from the Turkish Statistical Institute showed.

The demand was in part driven by rising prices as consumers pulled forward spending plans.

In a Reuters poll, the economy was forecast to have expanded 7.1% in the first quarter with full-year growth seen at 3%.

"We expect economic growth in Turkey to be sluggish over the rest of this year. Spillovers from the war in Ukraine and further lira weakness mean that inflation is likely to stay close to 70-80% until the very end of this year," Capital Economics said in a note.

"While the central bank is in no rush to hike interest rates to curb inflation, broader financial conditions are likely to remain tight and dampen investment," it said, even as it upgraded a full-year growth forecast to 4.3% from 0.3%.

Turkey was one of the few countries to expand in 2020, due largely to cheap loans to counter the pandemic's economic impact. The economy bounced back from the COVID-19 pandemic to grow 11% in 2021 as COVID-19 restrictions were largely lifted.

The lira
traded mostly flat at 16.425 against the dollar following the release of the data.



(Reporting by Can Sezer, Nevzat Devranoglu and Ali Kucukgocmen; Writing by Ezgi Erkoyun; Editing by Jonathan Spicer & Simon Cameron-Moore)
((ezgi.erkoyun@thomsonreuters.com; +90-212-350 7051; Reuters Messaging: ezgi.erkoyun.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net;))
 
https://www.agenzianova.com/a/63655...to-covid-19-grazie-a-settore-privato-dinamico

L'economia della Turchia ha visto una forte crescita dopo l’impatto della pandemia di Covid-19, riflettendo un settore privato dinamico. Lo ha reso noto il Fondo monetario internazionale (Fmi) in un comunicato rilasciato oggi, commentando la visita di una squadra dell'organizzazione che si è recata ad Ankara e Istanbul tra il 14 e il 26 ottobre scorsi.

https://it.tradingeconomics.com/turkey/foreign-exchange-reserves
 
Segnalo che la Turchia ha emesso un'obbligazione (US900123DF45) in dollari con cedola del 9,875% con scadenza 2028.
Sul TLX però non lo vedo ancora
 
UPDATE 1-Russia says it will pursue gas cooperation with Turkey, grain exports at G20
Oggi 13:27 - RSF
(Adds detail)
Nov 10 (Reuters) -
Russia will announce a number of initiatives related to gas cooperation with Turkey and grain exports at a gathering of leaders from the Group of 20 (G20) nations in Indonesia next week, the foreign ministry said on Thursday.


"A number of specific initiatives are planned, including increasing gas cooperation with Turkey, (and) organising large shipments of grain and fertilisers," it said in a statement.


President Vladimir Putin, who will not be attending the summit in person, has proposed the idea of creating what he calls a "gas hub" in Turkey, via which shipments of Russian gas could be sold on to the European market.


The foreign ministry said it hoped the summit would contribute to the establishment of a "multipolar" world, a term Putin often uses to criticise what he argues is Western dominance in global affairs.


Russia's presence at the G20 meeting has drawn criticism from Western countries and Ukraine, who called for Putin to be barred from attending the summit.


Russian and Indonesian officials said on Thursday that Putin would not go in person but may join virtually. Instead, Russia's delegation in Bali will be fronted by Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.


(Reporting by Reuters)
 
intanto vedo che la mia XS1629918415 che nei mesi scorsi era scivolata sotto i 90 adesso prezza a 94,48

tornata a quotazione più consona
 
RPT-POLL-Turkey to end easing next week with one last rate cut to 9%
Oggi 05:26 - RSF
(Repeats story with no changes to text)

*
reuters://realtime/verb=Open/url=cpurl://apps.cp./Apps/cb-polls?RIC=TRINT%3DECI
poll



By Ezgi Erkoyun and Ali Kucukgocmen
ISTANBUL, Nov 18 (Reuters) - Turkey's central bank is expected to cut rates by another 150 basis points next week to 9% and halt the easing thereafter, a Reuters poll showed on Friday, after President Tayyip Erdogan called for the stimulus despite more than 85% inflation.

The predicted cut would bring the cumulative easing in four months to 500 basis points, which the central bank says is necessary given signs of economic slowdown. It is swayed by Erdogan who had called for a single-digit rate by year-end.

The central bank will announce its rate decision at 1100 GMT on Nov. 24.

The bank cut its policy interest rate by an unexpectedly aggressive 150 basis points last month, and said at the time it evaluated a similar move for November before ending the current easing cycle.

All 14 economists that participated in the Reuters poll expected a 150 basis-point cut to 9% in the one-week repo rate
.

Of the 15 that gave year-end predictions, only one economist saw another cut in December, bringing the policy rate to 8.0%, while the others saw the bank holding steady after November.

In response to a question about the policy rate at the end of 2023, six of seven economists expected a pivot to tightening that would bring it to a range between 16% and 35%.

One economist noted that policy would depend on whether Erdogan is re-elected in a presidential vote in May or June next year.

Inflation has surged since autumn 2021, stoked by an unorthodox easing cycle of 500 basis points that sparked a currency crisis late last year.

Erdogan, a self-described "enemy" of interest rates, aims to boost investments, production, exports and employment while lowering rates under his economic programme.

The central bank expects inflation to drop to 65.2% by end-2022, thanks largely to a so-called base effect. That compares to a median estimate of 70.25% in the latest Reuters poll and 68.06% in a central bank survey published on Friday.

The bank says it will achieve a permanent fall in inflation once Turkey's chronic current account deficits turn to a surplus under the new economic plan.

Ankara does not see a surplus in its economic projections that cover up to 2025.

(Reporting by Ezgi Erkoyun and Ali Kucukgocmen; Editing by Jonathan Spicer)
((ali.kucukgocmen@thomsonreuters.com , @alikucukgocmen; +905319306206; Reuters Messaging: Reuters Messaging: ali.kucukgocmen.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))
 
BUZZ-Another huge rate cut intensifies pressure on Turkish lira
Oggi 12:31 - RSF
* Turkey cuts main interest rate by 150bp to 9.00%
* String of rate cuts starkly contrasts ECB, BOE and FED hikes
* While USD/TRY held near the record high since September - lira has dropped
* EUR/TRY +11.6% last 41 days, GBP/TRY +14.3% in 43 days, PLN/TRY +10% 32 days
* RUB/TRY similar to USD/TRY steady near the record high
* Lira is falling versus currencies of Turkey bigger trading partners
* ECB, Fed and BOE are expected to hike again this year, CBRT could cut in Dec
*


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(Jeremy Boulton is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are his own )
((jeremy.boulton@thomsonreuters.com))
 
Turkish strikes hit oil installations in northern Syria, sources say
Oggi 12:45 - RSF
By Suleiman Al-Khalidi
AMMAN, Nov 24 (Reuters) - Turkish drones are targeting key oil installations run by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in northeast Syria, three local sources said, in air strikes which drew strong condemnation from the United States overnight.
The SDF said dozens of people including 11 of its fighters were killed in the strikes, which mark the first time Turkey has systematically targeted oil fields in the SDF-controlled region.

Turkey's warplanes began conducting air strikes on Syrian Kurdish YPG militia bases in northern Syria at the weekend, prompting retaliatory strikes along the Syrian border.

The SDF, a U.S. partner in the fight against Islamic State, said Turkey had struck deeper into Syrian territory than in its previous operations. It said in a statement the strikes had killed 15 civilians and 25 Syrian government soldiers.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has promised to expand the operation and said Ankara would launch a land incursion at a time it judges convenient.

"The enemy aims to inflict big blows on our defence forces, especially our commanders and command centres ... In this way it prepares the ground for a ground offensive," said the SDF statement.

Ankara has already carried out three land incursions into Syria targeting Kurdish militias since 2016.

RETALIATION
Turkey launched the air operations in retaliation for a deadly Nov. 13 Istanbul bomb attack that it blamed on the YPG militia, which spearheads the SDF. Ankara views the YPG as an extension of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

Nobody has claimed responsibility and the PKK and YPG have denied involvement.

The Turkish drones hit oil installations late on Wednesday near the Syrian town of Qamishli, as well as the oil-rich area Rumeilan, near which U.S. troops are located, according to three sources in the Syrian cities of Qamishli and Hasaka.

Turkey has also escalated drone strikes in the heart of urban areas, targeting senior YPG military officials, said the sources, who are in touch with SDF figures.

The Pentagon said the Turkish air strikes threatened the safety of U.S. military personnel and that the escalating situation jeopardized years of progress against Islamic State militants in the area.

The United States has roughly 900 soldiers in Syria, mainly working with the SDF in the northeast.

Asked about the Pentagon comment, a Turkish defence ministry source said Ankara "selects targets sensitively" and was in close contact with U.S. counterparts. The source said oil fields were not among Ankara's targets.

The PKK is considered a terrorist organisation by Turkey, the United States and the European Union. U.S. support for the SDF has for years been a major source of tension in ties with its NATO ally Turkey.

(Additional reporting by Huseyin Hayatsever in Ankara; Writing by Tom Perry; Editing by Ali Kucukgocmen, Daren Butler and Gareth Jones)
((thomas.perry@thomsonreuters.com; Reuters Messaging: thomas.perry.reuters.com@reuters.net))
 

La Banca centrale turca affidata per la prima volta a una donna: Hafize Gaye Erkan è l'economista scelta da Erdogan​

2 Minuti di Lettura
Domenica 11 Giugno 2023, 18:57

E' una giovane donna il nuovo governatore della banca centrale turca. Si chiama Hafize Gaye Erkan, ha 43 anni e il presidente Recep Tayyp Erdogan la ha scelta per affrontare il difficile compito di alleggerire la pesante crisi del costo della vita e la costante svalutazione della lira turca, sperando al contempo di ripristinare la fiducia degli investitori esteri. L'economista è stata nominata venerdì,e di fatto è la prima donna al timone della banca centrale, subentrando a Sahap Kavcioglu, che ha guidato il presidente Tayyip Erdogan nel taglio dei tassi di interesse in un contesto di inflazione alle stelle. Erkan è considerata una banchiera di grande esperienza ed è un ulteriore segnale che il nuovo governo intende orientarsi verso una politica monetaria più convenzionale. In passato Erkan è stastta una ex dirigente di banca negli Stati Uniti. Laureata all'Università Bogazici di Istanbul, ha conseguito un dottorato in ricerca operativa e ingegneria finanziaria all'Università di Princeton.

Il suo curriculum è piuttosto ampio. Ha ricoperto numerosi incarichi di responsabilità, tra cui quelli presso Goldman Sachs e la First Republic Bank, con sede a San Francisco, (che è crollata a maggio, più di un anno dopo le dimissioni di Erkan da co-direttore generale).

Il suo nuovo ruolo la rende una delle poche donne che attualmente ricoprono il ruolo di governatore di una banca centrale in tutto il mondo, tra cui il presidente della BCE Christine Lagarde, il governatore della Banca centrale russa Elvira Nabiullina e la serba Jorgovanka Tabakovic.
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