(UPDATE: Comments added) Turkey’s annual inflation drops to 71.6, Turkstat decleares

FT/Adam Samson: Turkish inflation cools for first time in 8 months
Turkey’s inflation rate has cooled for the first time in eight months, bolstering policymakers’ hopes that a long-running cost of living crisis is easing a year after Ankara launched a sweeping economic turnaround plan.
The decline in inflation is one of the strongest signs to date that Turkey’s pivot away from unconventional monetary policy following President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s re-election in May last year is starting to bear fruit.
Still, several economists noted that there was a wide chasm between the official figures and another data set that measures prices in Istanbul, home to a fifth of Turkey’s population.
The Istanbul Chamber of Commerce (ITO) found prices rose at an annual rate of around 82 per cent in Istanbul in June. Selva Demiralp, an economist at Istanbul’s Koç University who closely follows inflation data, noted that when compared with the ITO figures, the national numbers were “surprisingly low”.
There is also a risk of a fresh setback in July, when authorities are likely to raise prices that are under their control, such as electricity tariffs, said Hakan Kara, a former Turkish central bank chief economist.
William Jackson, chief emerging markets economist at London-based Capital Economics, said the larger-than-expected decline in Turkish inflation in June marked the start of a new phase of the disinflation process.
In a note to clients, he predicted much steeper falls in July and August. "Still, it's likely to be a bumpy path down, with inflation unlikely to drop below 40% until 2025," he wrote.
No economist surveyed by Bloomberg predicted such an abrupt deceleration. The median forecasts of analysts were for an annual rate of 72.6% and a 2.2% monthly gain.
The government’s lira bonds rallied after the data release, with the yield on two- and 10-year securities falling 82 basis points and 36 basis points, respectively. The Turkish currency briefly erased losses and was trading little changed as of 11:31 a.m. in Istanbul.
Inflation may slow to “50% or even slightly lower” in August, said Tufan Comert, director of global markets strategy at BBVA in London.
“After that, the fall in inflation will slow down as the favorable base effect starts to dissipate, but the effect of the tight monetary policy, and hence the cooldown in the economy, will become more effective,” Comert said.