Reuters: Turkey’s inflation likely to drop below Policy rate in september

ISTANBUL, Sept 30 (Reuters) – Turkey’s annual inflation is expected to continue its decline in September and fall below the central bank’s policy rate for the first time since 2021, a Reuters poll showed on Monday.

The median estimate of 19 economists showed annual inflation of 48.3% in September, down from 51.97% in August. Forecasts ranged from 47.8% to 49.1%. Month-on-month, inflation is seen rising to 2.2%, with forecasts ranging between 2% and 2.8%.
Monthly inflation was high in January and February, largely due to a big minimum wage hike and new-year price updates, before slowing to some 3.2% in March and April. After dipping in June, inflation rose to 3.23% in July on the back of mid-year price adjustments.
Monthly inflation was 2.47% in August on the back of a natural gas price hike for residential users, the first such price adjustment in almost two years.
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Earlier this month, Turkey’s central bank held its main interest rate steady at 50% for a sixth straight month saying it remained highly attentive to inflation risks, but removing a reference to potential tightening.
In a recent research note, Bank of America said it expects an initial rate cut in December, because services inflation has not yet slowed down and monthly inflation is not where the central bank guides it to be.
It said that although the real sector “feels the pain”, data shows a soft landing rather than a hard landing.
“We don’t see a need for a rush to big cuts given the slow adjustment and still high level of inflation,” it said, adding that sticky services inflation and still elevated food prices pose a risk to the central bank’s year-end inflation target.
The central bank, which has hiked rates by 4,150 basis points since June last year, sees inflation falling to 38% at the end of this year and 14% next. In the medium term program, the government sees end-2024 inflation of 41.5%.
reuters.com