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Turkish Lira Jumps on Hopes for Rates Orthodoxy After Departures

Turkish Lira Jumps on Hopes for Rates Orthodoxy After Departures

The Turkish lira surged the most since 2018 as foreign investors bet higher interest rates could be coming after the weekend resignation of the country’s economy czar and the dismissal of the central bank chief.

The currency, the worst performer in emerging markets this year, gained more than 6% against the dollar, a rebound not seen since the aftermath of Turkey’s 2018 market meltdown. While overseas investors are piling into liras, locals and Turkish companies are using the rally as an opportunity to buy the greenback, according to three traders who spoke on condition of anonymity because they’re not authorized to comment publicly. The Istanbul stocks gauge headed for its biggest gain since August.

Turkish Lira Jumps on Hopes for Rates Orthodoxy After Departures

Speculation an interest-rate increase may be looming came after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan fired central bank Governor Murat Uysal over the weekend. That was followed on Sunday by the announcement from Finance Minister Berat Albayrak -- Erdogan’s son-in-law -- that he would resign. The Turkish currency has lost about 30% against the dollar in 2020, a decline that has accelerated since the central bank held back from raising the cost of borrowing at its October meeting.

“The changes in management signal that the lira’s depreciation was beyond tolerance limits,” said Onur Ilgen, Head of Treasury at MUFG Bank Turkey. “Investors think that Albayrak’s resignation could be a reversal of the unorthodox policies that have been applied since 2018 currency crisis.”

The lira was trading 6% stronger against the U.S. dollar at 8.0354 as of 14:20 p.m. in Istanbul. The Borsa Istanbul 100 Index was up 2.7%, its sixth day of gains.

“Markets give the new policymakers the benefit of the doubt after a highly disappointing few years,” said Emre Akcakmak, a portfolio adviser at East Capital in Dubai. “However, time is limited and cosmetic changes will not be welcome.”

Turkish Lira Jumps on Hopes for Rates Orthodoxy After Departures

Uysal’s sudden replacement by former Finance Minister Naci Agbal is unlikely to stem the lira’s losses unless monetary policy takes a more hawkish turn. Inflation is in double digits, the country is running a current-account deficit and foreign reserves are being eroded.

‘Short-Lived’

Turkey is scheduled to hold its next rates meeting on Nov. 19. In the run up to that decision, “the current situation and expectations will be reviewed, developments will be closely monitored,” Agbal said in his first statement on Monday. “Necessary policy decisions will be made with the available data and final evaluations.”

While hopeful for a shift to more orthodox policies, some analysts remained cautious.

“I fear the positive reaction will be short-lived,” said Ulrich Leuchtmann, head of currency strategy at Commerzbank AG. “I interpret Uysal’s ouster and especially his replacement as a stronger grip of the Turkish President on the central bank. That cannot end in a lira-positive way as long as he does not end this unconventional monetary policy experiment Turkey is running for 3 years now.”

Albayrak’s term was characterized by mostly-futile efforts to control the value of the currency without resorting to raising interest rates, in line with Erdogan’s widely discredited view that higher interest rates lead to higher inflation. Most economists think the opposite is true.

Joe Biden’s victory in the U.S. presidential election is unlikely to do the lira any favors either. Traders have been concerned that U.S.-Turkish relations will cool under the new administration. The Turkish government faces possible U.S. sanctions over the purchase of a Russian missile system.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.