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Nilgiri

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Unbelievable high. And Lira has been somewhat stable for a while now, so what are the real reasons behind it?

Interest payments in Euro? Imported goods?

It would come from 3 things:

A) Import trends and inelasticities like you mention, esp if they make up significant portion of CPI basket

B) Any (esp short term foreign) debt-based spending (i.e printing of lira) while supply chokepoints are not addressed

C) Official inflation rate catching up to actual hidden inflation rate slowly....as mask slips.
 

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Unbelievable high. And Lira has been somewhat stable for a while now, so what are the real reasons behind it?

Interest payments in Euro? Imported goods?

It takes 3 to 6 months to see the real effect of devaluation on the inflation, so it is actually because of the downfall of the Lira back in March.. First imported good prices increase, then energy and raw materials, energy to agriculture, than these increasing prices cause increase in labour cost, wages, salaries etc.. Services become expensive.. it takes couple of months to see the chain reaction.
 

what

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It would come from 3 things:

A) Import trends and inelasticities like you mention, esp if they make up significant portion of CPI basket

B) Any (esp short term foreign) debt-based spending (i.e printing of lira) while supply chokepoints are not addressed

C) Official inflation rate catching up to actual hidden inflation rate slowly....as mask slips.


Boy did this remind me of my misery with economics in my study times.
 

Saithan

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Boy did this remind me of my misery with economics in my study times.
We all feel that way with macro economics, it's hairy.


Why's the President saying this stuff ? I guess no one else has any credibility left ?!
 

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Turkey’s Trendyol raises $1.5 bln, valuing it at $16.5 billion​

ISTANBUL​

Turkey’s Trendyol raises $1.5 bln, valuing it at $16.5 billion

Turkish e-commerce firm Trendyol, backed by Chinese internet giant Alibaba, said yesterday it had entered into agreements to raise $1.5 billion from a number of high-profile investors, valuing the company at $16.5 billion.

That makes the company Turkey’s first “decacorn,” a word used for those companies over $10 billion, according to a written statement.

Trendyol, one of Turkey’s best known e-commerce platforms, has drawn backing from foreign investors and holds a leading position in Turkey’s fragmented e-commerce market.

The round was co-led by General Atlantic, SoftBank Vision Fund 2, as well as Princeville Capital and sovereign wealth funds, ADQ (UAE) and the Qatar Investment Authority, the company said in a statement.

“The funding proceeds will support Trendyol’s growth both within Turkey and internationally,” company’s founder Demet Suzan Mutlu said.

Founded in 2010, Trendyol serves more than 30 million shoppers, delivering more than 1 million packages per day from groceries to clothes.

“While hundreds of thousands of people work for sales operations on our platform, we also provide more jobs in sectors such as delivery, packaging and customer services. Thus, we have made a contribution of 1.1 million employment positions to our economy. We are aiming to increase this figure to 2.4 million people in 2023,” she added.

In April, Alibaba, which bought a majority stake in Trendyol in 2018, increased its stake to 86.5 percent in a capital increase, according to the country’s trade registry.

According to a study conducted by the independent research organization PAL, 98,000 businesses and 1.1 million individuals sold 374 million products on Trendyol in 2020.

________________________

This is pretty awesome, and it would be even more awesome if domestic produced stuff were sold on this platform. But Turks aren't really known for making good Marketing of products. Only a few among them really knows how to reach new markets with good PR and Marketing.
 

what

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While the company is now over 80% owned by Ali Baba in China, the good news is that Trendyol wants to invest a lot of that fresh raised money to expand abroad and to help Turkish SMBs to digitize. So good news overall. We need more of these regional champions.
 

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Türk Telekom’s revenues up 19 percent in first half of 2021​

ISTANBUL​

Türk Telekom’s revenues up 19 percent in first half of 2021

Türk Telekom, Turkey’s prominent telecommunications company, racked up 15.8 billion Turkish Liras ($1.8 billion) in consolidated revenues in the first half of 2021, posting an annual increase of 19 percent, it said in a press release on Aug. 10.

The company’s earnings before interest taxes depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) hit 7.8 billion liras ($901 million) in the January-June period, while its EBITDA margin was 49.6 percent.

Türk Telekom’s net profits in the same period reached 2.6 billion liras ($302.2 million), and its investment expenditures increased 25 percent to 2.7 billion liras ($312.2 million).

“Our commitment to sustainable growth is based on swift digital transformation, strategic investments and first-class customer experience,” Türk Telekom CEO Ümit Önal was quoted as saying in the statement.

Türk Telekom aims to lead the country’s transition to 5G technologies, Önal said, adding: “Providing everyone’s access to fiber network is among our foremost priorities. By the second quarter of this year, the length of our fiber network in the 81 provinces reached 345,000 kilometers. The total number of our fiber broadband subscribers hit 8.1 million, while the share of our fiber subscribers exceeded 58 percent.”

The company has revised its 2021 targets upwards, according to Önal’s remarks, raising operational revenue expectation from 16 percent to 17 percent.

Türk Telekom’s total subscriptions increased 2 million in the last 12 months, reaching 50.7 million at the end of the second quarter. The company has 13.8 million fixed broadband and 23.4 million mobile customers.

 

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Good video.

Only way to fix the economy imo is having independant judiary along with death penalty but only for public officials. I'd say for public servants too, but that would require the systems to be super secure, so ppl serving aren't executed by mistake. Bribery, abuse of position, nepotism, terror supporting are just some of the things on top of my head that would immediately put you in the category.

TBMM and President also subject to death penalty of course. AKP has fundamentally unravelled the judiaciary and cleaning up would require executions. IMO
 

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Good video.

Only way to fix the economy imo is having independant judiary along with death penalty but only for public officials. I'd say for public servants too, but that would require the systems to be super secure, so ppl serving aren't executed by mistake. Bribery, abuse of position, nepotism, terror supporting are just some of the things on top of my head that would immediately put you in the category.

TBMM and President also subject to death penalty of course. AKP has fundamentally unravelled the judiaciary and cleaning up would require executions. IMO
Will never happen IMO
The death penalty will never be applied in Turkey
Not only will the AKP reject it, but also along with the CHP, IYI, and the HDP (especially these guys, lol) as well
I believe the motion to introduce the death penalty was previously mentioned in the Turkish parliament with Erdo saying that if the parliament agrees, he will adopt it. However, it was rejected by many MPs from all parties

I dont really think the CHP ,especially, will introduce such a law tbh! Now that their prospects of winning are high, they will ensure to leave no base uncovered; in order to ensure that their grip on power remains for a long time. Introducing the death penalty is like leaving a tool that can be used at any moment against them and considering how the CHP is pro-USA and pro-HDP, shady things are bound to happen definitely

Even corrupt AKP officials wont like it as it might lead to their..... you know..... death whether under the CHP or AKP rule
 

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Apparently, one of the two countries that Turkey will sign with it the currency swap deal turned out to be South Korea
I bet the next one may be UK, Japan, or Hong Kong
 

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Apparently, one of the two countries that Turkey will sign with it the currency swap deal turned out to be South Korea
I bet the next one may be UK, Japan, or Hong Kong
Currency swap is not a solution to the current economic woes. :(
 

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Currency swap is not a solution to the current economic woes. :(
I know
Interest rates should completely be raised to 25-26%

I may be wrong, but I have a feeling that the TCMB may raise the interests rate this week. Again, I may be wrong
 

Saithan

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I know
Interest rates should completely be raised to 25-26%

I may be wrong, but I have a feeling that the TCMB may raise the interests rate this week. Again, I may be wrong

Problem is the government especially RTE. The video @what has shared is pretty good you should watch it.

If the problem isn't solved it may even grow to affect defense sector.
 

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Thoughts?
I believe this is the first discount in 10 years

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="tr" dir="ltr">• Binek araç Özel Tüketim Vergisi matrahları değiştirildi.<br><br>• Anahtar teslim fiyatı 320 bin TL’ye kadar olan otomobiller %80’den %50 ÖTV dilimine inecek ve fiyatları yaklaşık %16 düşecek.<br><br>— Resmi Gazete | <a href="https://twitter.com/eozpeynirci?ref_src=twsrc^tfw">@eozpeynirci</a></p>&mdash; ibrahim Haskoloğlu (@haskologlu) <a href=" ">August 12, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 

Lool

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I still cant believe how quickly is the trade gap being closed which means less foreign dollars leave the country
Personally, as one who rejects the idea of lowering the lira as it will increase the costs of imports and make it harder to pay foreign debts, just watching these insane numbers being reduced urges me to check whether my theory has faults
Turkey is exporting like damn crazy and breaking records while the world is still on lockdown (just imagine full opening and what will happen to exports) moreover it increases demand which reduced unemployment rate
But can it really reduce the damn defecit by a billion dollars every month? Like that is insane! If anyone can explain, I would appreciate it

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/BREAKING?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc^tfw">#BREAKING</a> Turkey&#39;s current account balance posts $1.12B deficit in June, down $1.94B year-on-year, says Central Bank</p>&mdash; ANADOLU AGENCY (@anadoluagency) <a href=" ">August 13, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 

Saithan

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I still cant believe how quickly is the trade gap being closed which means less foreign dollars leave the country
Personally, as one who rejects the idea of lowering the lira as it will increase the costs of imports and make it harder to pay foreign debts, just watching these insane numbers being reduced urges me to check whether my theory has faults
Turkey is exporting like damn crazy and breaking records while the world is still on lockdown (just imagine full opening and what will happen to exports) moreover it increases demand which reduced unemployment rate
But can it really reduce the damn defecit by a billion dollars every month? Like that is insane! If anyone can explain, I would appreciate it

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/BREAKING?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc^tfw">#BREAKING</a> Turkey&#39;s current account balance posts $1.12B deficit in June, down $1.94B year-on-year, says Central Bank</p>&mdash; ANADOLU AGENCY (@anadoluagency) <a href=" ">August 13, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
Whilst it's good to see a tradebalance the issue at hand can't be solved easily with balancing out the trade. Turkey still has a waste debt that needs reduced and to do that we need to have a plan to reduce it.

This of course brings back the discussion on how much debt a country should accumulate vs. development.

Construction driven economy is not healthy.

But I'd like to say that a country that relies on HOT money e.g. tourists and FDI into Bourse Istanbul etc. should definitely not accumulate a debt that overshadows the economy.
 

Nilgiri

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I still cant believe how quickly is the trade gap being closed which means less foreign dollars leave the country
Personally, as one who rejects the idea of lowering the lira as it will increase the costs of imports and make it harder to pay foreign debts, just watching these insane numbers being reduced urges me to check whether my theory has faults
Turkey is exporting like damn crazy and breaking records while the world is still on lockdown (just imagine full opening and what will happen to exports) moreover it increases demand which reduced unemployment rate
But can it really reduce the damn defecit by a billion dollars every month? Like that is insane! If anyone can explain, I would appreciate it

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/BREAKING?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc^tfw">#BREAKING</a> Turkey&#39;s current account balance posts $1.12B deficit in June, down $1.94B year-on-year, says Central Bank</p>&mdash; ANADOLU AGENCY (@anadoluagency) <a href=" ">August 13, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

This is a month figure though correct? i.e latest month compared to same month last year?
 

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Fitch raised its growth expectation for Turkey this year from 6.3 percent to 7.9 percent


Fitch Ratings raised its growth expectation for Turkey this year from 6.3 percent to 7.9 percent due to the high base effect and the ongoing recovery in economic activities.​

Dilara Zengin|14.08.2021

Fitch raised its growth expectation for Turkey this year from 6.3 percent to 7.9 percent


Washington​

International credit rating agency Fitch Ratings maintained Turkey's credit rating as "BB-" and its outlook as "stable".
In the statement made by Fitch, it was noted that Turkey's credit rating and outlook were confirmed. In the statement, it was stated that Turkey's long-term foreign currency issuer default rating was confirmed as "BB-" and the outlook as "stable". In the statement, which stated that policy uncertainty remains high in Turkey, it was noted that inflation is expected to decline to 16.9 percent at the end of 2021 due to the positive base effect and slowing domestic demand.
In the statement, it was stated that the average annual inflation is expected to be 14.6 percent for next year and 11.8 percent for 2023.

In Fitch's statement, it was reported that this year's growth expectation for Turkey was increased from 6.3 percent to 7.9 percent due to the strong performance especially in the first quarter of the year, due to the high turnover effect and the ongoing resistance in economic activity.
Pointing out that the slowdown in domestic demand in the second half of this year will be balanced by the strong export and the recovery in the tourism sector, it was stated that the country's economy is expected to grow by 3.5 percent in 2022.

In the statement, it was stated that the current account deficit narrowed and it was recorded that the current account deficit will decrease to 3 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP) in 2021 with the improvement in tourism revenues in the second half of this year.



AA obviously Cut the FITCH Rating short but the Report is very Detailed.


Turkey's ratings reflect weak monetary policy credibility, high inflation, low external liquidity in the context of high financing requirements and geopolitical risks. These credit weaknesses are set against low government deficits and debt and stronger growth performance and structural indicators, such as GDP per capita and Human Development, relative to rating peers.

The Stable Outlook balances elevated policy uncertainty due to rising inflation, lack of central bank independence and the potential for de-stabilising stimulus ahead general elections due by 2023 against an easing of near-term external financing pressures due to a narrowing current account deficit, moderately higher international reserves, and banks and corporates' uninterrupted access to sufficient external finance to roll-over large debt payments.

Policy uncertainty increased in March and remains high after the abrupt dismissal of the central bank governor, the third since July 2019, leading to sharp lira depreciation, portfolio outflows and tighter financing conditions. The central bank's new management has kept its policy rate steady at 19% since March and maintained its predecessor's commitment to a flexible exchange rate and the use of the one-week repo rate as its main policy instrument, preserving improvements in terms of transparency. Credit and fiscal policies also remain aligned with the objective to reduce inflation.

In Fitch's view, political considerations limit the ability of the central bank to raise its policy rate despite rising inflation (18.95% yoy in July). Weak monetary policy credibility is reflected in a record of delayed response to mounting macroeconomic pressures or premature policy easing, and inflation remaining significantly above the 5% official target over an extended period.


Fitch Ratings - London - 13 Aug 2021: Fitch Ratings has affirmed Turkey's Long-Term Foreign-Currency Issuer Default Rating (IDR) at 'BB-' with a Stable Outlook.

A full list of rating actions is at the end of this rating action commentary.

KEY RATING DRIVERS​


Turkey's ratings reflect weak monetary policy credibility, high inflation, low external liquidity in the context of high financing requirements and geopolitical risks. These credit weaknesses are set against low government deficits and debt and stronger growth performance and structural indicators, such as GDP per capita and Human Development, relative to rating peers.

The Stable Outlook balances elevated policy uncertainty due to rising inflation, lack of central bank independence and the potential for de-stabilising stimulus ahead general elections due by 2023 against an easing of near-term external financing pressures due to a narrowing current account deficit, moderately higher international reserves, and banks and corporates' uninterrupted access to sufficient external finance to roll-over large debt payments.

Policy uncertainty increased in March and remains high after the abrupt dismissal of the central bank governor, the third since July 2019, leading to sharp lira depreciation, portfolio outflows and tighter financing conditions. The central bank's new management has kept its policy rate steady at 19% since March and maintained its predecessor's commitment to a flexible exchange rate and the use of the one-week repo rate as its main policy instrument, preserving improvements in terms of transparency. Credit and fiscal policies also remain aligned with the objective to reduce inflation.

In Fitch's view, political considerations limit the ability of the central bank to raise its policy rate despite rising inflation (18.95% yoy in July). Weak monetary policy credibility is reflected in a record of delayed response to mounting macroeconomic pressures or premature policy easing, and inflation remaining significantly above the 5% official target over an extended period.

We expect inflation to ease to a still high 16.9% by end-2021, due to a favourable base effect and slowing domestic demand. The latter will be partly due to a marked slowdown in credit growth due to tighter financial conditions, the phasing out of 2020 credit stimulus and the introduction of macroprudential measures targeting retail loan growth. The potential for additional depreciation pressures, further deterioration in inflation expectations and indexation mechanisms such as wage agreements increase inflationary risks. We forecast inflation to average 14.6% and 11.8% in 2022-2023, remaining multiples above the forecast 3.4% 'BB' median.

We have revised up our growth forecast up to 7.9% in 2021, from 6.3% in June, due to high carryover effect (especially after a strong performance in 1Q21) and continued resilience in economic activity. Slowing of domestic demand in 2H21 will be cushioned by strong export growth and a recovery in the tourism sector. We forecast growth to slow to 3.5% in 2022, based on our expectation that Turkey's policy mix, especially monetary policy, avoids exacerbating macroeconomic imbalances.

The current account deficit has narrowed, as rapid export growth and a decline in gold imports have mitigated the impact of rising commodity prices, including energy imports. The full year current account deficit will decline to 3% of GDP in 2021, from 5.2% in 2020, as tourism export receipts improve yoy in 2H21. Under our baseline policy assumption and recovering tourism revenues, we expect the current account deficit to average 2.3% in 2022-2023, similar to the forecast 'BB' median.

International reserves have recovered due to strong export revenues, including export rediscounts, net external borrowing and the increase of the FX swap with China, after a decline in April-May. Reserves will receive a further boost from the special drawing rights allocation equivalent to USD6.4 billion and the recently announced FX swap with South Korea. We forecast reserves to reach USD109 billion at end-2021, but decline in 2022-2023 to USD100 billion given continued current account deficits and high financial dollarisation, and the limited upside for portfolio inflows, in our view.

General government debt will remain broadly stable at 39.7% of GDP in 2021, significantly below the forecast 59% 'BB' median. Currency risk has increased (57% of central government debt was foreign currency linked or denominated at May-2021, up from 39% in 2017). The objective of improving domestic debt composition in terms of costs, duration and currency remains dependent on reduced policy uncertainty and stronger investor confidence.

Nevertheless, the banking sector remains vulnerable to exchange-rate volatility due to the impact on capitalisation, asset quality, refinancing risk (given short-term foreign-currency financing) and high deposit dollarisation (56% including precious metals). The banking sector has increased its exposure to the sovereign both through government debt holdings (70% of domestic debt in May) and FX swaps with the central bank.

Geopolitical risks will remain elevated, but existing sanctions have so far had a limited impact on the economy. In addition to the S-400 issue and US cooperation with Kurdish forces in Syria, the relationship with the US has several potential flash points. Recent developments related to Cyprus could reignite tensions with the EU, and operations in northern Syria, Libya, and support for Azerbaijan in the conflict with Armenia could represent additional sources of tension with Russia.

General elections are scheduled for 2023 and the political calendar will have an impact on policy direction and expectations of economic actors, in Fitch's view. Given the weakened credibility and policy buffers, the potential size of economic stimulus may have to balance the expected economic and political benefits against the risk of reigniting macroeconomic instability, which seems to have hurt the government's support in 2020. Ongoing judicial proceedings against opposition parties and possible presidential candidates, potentially preventing them from participating in the election, could increase political uncertainty.
 
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