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Hedge Fund Looks for Bottom in Turkish Lira

Hedge Fund That Made 51% Amid EM Carnage Looks for Lira Buy Sign

Hedge fund manager Peter Kisler is looking to this week’s Turkish central-bank meeting for a signal to start buying the lira.

The question is whether Turkey will let its currency weaken further or hike rates to defend it, said North Asset Management’s Kisler. The London-based investor sold all its Turkish assets before capital outflows started accelerating in March, fueling the lira’s decline to a record against the dollar.

The lira one-month deposit rate of 16.25% is the highest in emerging markets, and lucrative compared with peers such as Russia’s 4.35% and South Africa’s 4.25%. But those returns would dissipate if the lira continues weakening and inflation remains in double digits. So far, policy makers have resisted raising borrowing costs even as the currency slumps, and they’re expected to leave the benchmark rate unchanged at 8.25% on Thursday.

“If the central bank meaningfully hikes rates and says they are willing to hike further, that would definitely make Turkish assets more attractive,” Kisler said. “If they do hike, the first step would be to see the market reaction and how the government outside the central bank would react, but I would at least start looking for buying options on the lira.”

Hedge Fund Looks for Bottom in Turkish Lira

Kisler’s North Emerging Markets Fund returned 51% in the first six months of this year by shorting emerging-market debt before the selloff, according to a monthly report seen by Bloomberg. Similar macro funds are up an average of 2.7% this year.

The easiest way to profit from lira appreciation is to buy the currency cash, Kisler said, because of scarce liquidity in the debt market, a result of restrictions on the flow of capital designed to stifle foreign investors’ ability to bet against the Turkish currency. Kisler said he wasn’t targeting any specific exchange-rate level to buy, and would look out for measures aimed at stabilizing the lira.

The lira gained for a second day on Wednesday as the central bank took further steps to tighten liquidity in the banking sector. The currency has declined 19% this year, hitting a record of 7.4084 per dollar last week. Before its most recent bout of weakness, the currency was held in a tight range below 7 per dollar for more than two months through dollar sales by state banks.

“I suspect they are going to try to re-peg again at a new, higher rate, but is that rate 7.5 or is it 8?,” Kisler said. “If they have actually taken the decision to let it go, you could see it weaken to 8, if not more, and all the carry will be gone. There is a lot of uncertainty.”

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.