P.A. Turkey

Turkey’s central bank finally realizes the rise in inflation thus no rate cut… well that was a surprise

Today’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) produced no rate cuts despite 25 basis points expected on the average by the market and the MPC decided to keep the policy rate (one-week repo auction rate) constant at 8.25 percent.

Following the announcement, Turkish lira slightly gained ground versus the dollar to 6.86 to 6.83; though the recovery was not maintained.

The bank’s decision to halt the monetary easing that began in July 2019 from 24.00 percent down to 8.25 percent resulting with a massive rate scheme, was based on the rise in the core inflation and food price inflation despite the crashing domestic demand. Currently the core inflation is at 10.3 percent with the food price inflation at 12.9 percent.

The bank also stressed weakening global growth with respect to COVID-19 in the second quarter, normalization steps taken by several countries have contributed to a partial recovery. While adding that uncertainties remained high creating a need to follow capital flows, financial conditions, international trade and commodity prices.  

While Treasury and Finance Minister Albayrak sees Turkey engaging to a V shaped recovery in 2H20 and to end year with a slightly positive GDP growth, the IMF’s revised GDP expectation is still at -5% GDP for Turkey. In fact, the average market call ranges in 3.5-5% GDP contraction for 2020. Thus, as the bank expects to see slower inflation late down in the year, such a trend combined with a contracting GDP could as well motivate the bank to deliver a few more rate cuts in 4Q20. Yet, as for the 3Q20, no more rate cuts should be expected before Turkey’s core inflation slides back into single digits to around 7-8% from the current 10.3%. That could as well happen not before 2021.

Here is the note issued following the MPC: