CURRENCIES

Volatile Turkish lira seesaws after inflation surges

Published Mon, Jan 3, 2022 · 09:50 PM

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    Istanbul

    TURKEY'S lira briefly rallied as much as 3 per cent on Monday (Jan 3) afternoon, reversing an early plunge and continuing a volatile pattern in recent weeks after data showed that inflation soared to a 19-year high beyond the 36 per cent last month.

    With moves exaggerated by low volumes, the lira had weakened as much as 5 per cent in morning trade, sustaining a slide in 2021 which saw the currency suffer its worst year since President Tayyip Erdogan came to power nearly 2 decades ago.

    The currency stood at 13.1 against the dollar at 1200 GMT, 0.7 per cent stronger on the day, after oscillating in a wide range between 12.77 and 13.92.

    It touched a record low 18.4 just 2 weeks ago.

    While investors are concerned about the central bank's recent slashing of interest rates despite surging inflation, there was little market reaction to official data showing much higher-than-expected December price rises.

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    Consumer prices surged 36.08 per cent year on year, far outstripping a Reuters poll forecast of 30.6 per cent, driven by rises in transport, and food and drinks.

    The lira was by far the worst performer in emerging markets in 2021, as well as in the last few years, and lost 44 per cent of its value against the US currency over the year.

    It weakened 19 per cent in the past week alone.

    The central bank has slashed its policy rate by 500 basis points since September, under pressure from Erdogan as he pushed a "new economic programme" focused on credit and exports despite the Turkish lira's collapse and rising inflation.

    To curb the lira weakness, Erdogan unveiled a scheme 3 weeks ago in which the state protects converted local deposits from losses versus hard currencies, sparking a sharp 50 per cent rally in the lira with support from the central bank.

    But the lira then sank again last week, prompting a call on Friday from Erdogan - whose opinion poll ratings are sliding ahead of an election in 2023 - for Turks to keep all their savings in lira and shift gold into banks. REUTERS

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