Autumn refinancing shows ‘chickens coming home to roost’ for Turkey’s ‘contrary’ economic policy, says financial journal

Autumn refinancing shows ‘chickens coming home to roost’ for Turkey’s ‘contrary’ economic policy, says financial journal
'Erdoganomics' at work. / bne IntelliNews
By bne IntelIiNews November 2, 2022

“The chickens are coming home to roost” when it comes to Turkey’s “unorthodox” and “contrary” economic policy and this autumn’s refinancing round for Turkish banks, GlobalCapital wrote on November 1.

One Turkish lender expects a third of international lenders to drop out of loans to Turkey’s banks this autumn, the financial markets journal added.

With Akbank and Vakifbank having both refinanced loans at prices far higher than in the spring or last autumn, the latest refinancing round may be “the turning point” for Turkey, advised George Collard, senior emerging markets reporter at GlobalCapital.

Vakifbank expected the average rollover rate for refinancings in October and November to be 70%, he noted.

“Surely this was inevitable. [Turkish President Recep Tayyip] Erdogan has doubled down on unorthodox policy over the last year, exacerbating the country’s economic woes with decisions long criticised in international markets,” observed Collard.

He added: “There are further storm clouds building for those sticking by Turkish clients. Next year comes an election, and there is no guarantee Erdogan will relinquish power in the event of defeat nor deviate from his economic plan.

“As a global recession looms, threatening international lenders with a whole host of problems in an array of other markets, the prospects do not look good for Turkish borrowers. Governments toying with contrary economic policy should take note that they cannot rely on lending relationships for their institutions indefinitely.”

GlobalCapital, said Collard, a year ago warned global lenders that they should “stop and think about their lending to clients in Turkey, and that the latest crisis there was different to those in the past”.

He also recalled: “A year ago,.. Erdogan forced the central bank to cut interest rates to stem inflation [in line with his unorthodox economic plan]. Meddling with central bank independence is never popular with investors but forcing it into unorthodox policy such as that is even worse. Neither is declaring an ‘economic war of independence’ as Erdogan did.”

Despite inflation officially standing at 83% y/y (and independent price research group ENAG estimating inflation at more than twice that), Turkey introduced a jumbo policy rate cut on October 20, lopping 150 bp off the benchmark to take it to 10.5%.

The Turkish lira lost 44% against the dollar last year. This year to date, it is towards 30% down against the USD.

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