The
skies were dark over Istanbul on Friday, but for the Turkish central bank the
clouds have lifted. After a titanic struggle to defend the Turkish lira – which
involved spending some $15bn ofreserves and increasing effective interest rates
from 5.75 per cent to around 12 per cent – the pressure is off, at least for
now.
The lira has strengthened from
its low point last month of about TL1.92 to the dollar, trading at around
TL1.82 on Friday – and interest rates have come down.
It is hard to give a precise
figure for current rates, precisely because the bank uses what it calls an
interest rate corridor, which allows it to move rates up and down on a daily
basis by rationing the supply of cheaper weekly loans. But analysts say the
effective rate is down to about 7.5 per cent compared to those earlier levels
of 12 per cent.
The bank has even started lending
at the 5.75 per cent benchmark rate again.
One big factor in lifting the
sense of siege is improved
sentiment about emerging market risk across the world; another has been the central
bank’s own steps.
Despite many calls from abroad
for a simpler, more easily comprehensible policy, analysts such as Nilufer
Sezgin at Ekspres Invest in Istanbul say the bank has generally been
sure-footed and that volatile times require all the flexibility the interest rate
corridor can provide.
corridor can provide.
But is it time to relax? Inflation
is above 10 per cent and second order inflationary effects from the lira’s
slide last year could kick in. Net central bank reserves are less than $50bn
when items such as liabilities to the International Monetary Fund and
commercial banks’
deposits are excluded. And the current account – probably the economy’s greatest weak point – remains at about 10 per cent of gross domestic product, despite recent indications it is inching down.
deposits are excluded. And the current account – probably the economy’s greatest weak point – remains at about 10 per cent of gross domestic product, despite recent indications it is inching down.
So while the bank may enjoy a
certain feeling of satisfaction, it shouldn’t unfurl a mission accomplished
banner any time soon.
Sezgin adds: “If we take the
beginning of the emerging market optimism that started on January 6 as a
reference, the Turkish lira appears to be a slight underperformer, despite $50m
foreign exchange sales every day. Underperformance could have been avoided
partly if the central bank had not fully eliminated the additional tightening
by reducing the funding cost by 450 basis points back to 7.5 per cent… The
central bank may again have to overshoot in terms of tightening should
sentiment sour.”
Indeed there may be other reasons
to question the basis for the bank’s recent decision to relax its stance. The
bank is officially independent, but the government is a vigorous proponent of
lower interest rates.
How vigorous? In a recent
speech, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey’s powerful prime minister, vowed to
fight for lower rates in the face of what he called “the interest rate lobby”,
which he said was on the attack.
He called for the gap between
market interest rates and the benchmark 5.75 per cent to be closed closed,
arguing that high interest rates cause high inflation. “The lower we can bring
down market rates, the less inflation will be,” he said.
The prime minister’s arguments
aren’t exactly what the economic texbooks say. But in coming weeks, Turkey –
the central bank in particular – may put his theory to the test. For Turkey’s
economy, much will depend on the outcome.
Hiç yorum yok:
Yorum Gönder