ING: Monitoring Turkey: Easing bias remains intact

While acknowledging the strengthening domestic demand in the fourth quarter and the recent acceleration in loan growth despite being at disinflationary levels, the Central Bank of Turkey (CBT) delivered a third 250bp cut earlier this month, highlighting the decline in the underlying inflation trend in February
Economic data for the fourth quarter of 2024 shows domestic demand recovering despite tight monetary policies. Private consumption reached a record high after declines in mid-2024, while net exports made a negative contribution to growth. Indicators suggest GDP growth will continue to recover in early 2025, though the central bank considers demand conditions to support lower inflation. If demand grows faster than expected, the bank may introduce new measures or slow interest rate cuts.
February inflation was lower than expected, contributed by both food and non-food items, following a sharp rise in January. The Finance Ministry reversed the increase in hospital copayments, which contributed to last month's better inflation figure. While strong domestic demand has led producers to pass on higher costs to consumers, inflation is expected to continue declining as the central bank maintains tight policies, currency strengthens, and service inflation improves.
Inflation is likely to fall further in March, allowing for a potential 250bp interest rate cut in April, in our view. Future central bank decisions will depend on factors like foreign currency deposits, exchange rates, and foreign reserve levels. In February, the Central Bank shifted from buying to selling foreign currency due to increased local demand. Sustained pressure on the currency may lead to stricter policies, smaller rate cuts, or a pause.
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The central bank is taking a flexible approach, deciding on interest rates at each meeting and signaling further cuts as inflation declines. We expect inflation to be at 27%, with a policy rate of 29% by the end of 2025, though risks remain on the upside.
Despite stricter loan growth limits introduced in January, bank lending has accelerated, especially in foreign currency loans. To slow this trend, the central bank reduced the FX lending growth cap further and narrowed exemptions for this type of loan.