Obbligazioni valute high yield TURCHIA bond in usd e lira turca

Turchia: deficit commerciale diminuito del 58 per cento ad agosto
Ankara, 01 set 16:57 - (Agenzia Nova) - Il deficit commerciale della Turchia è diminuito del 58 per cento su base annua. Lo rivelano i dati preliminari diffusi oggi dal ministero del Commercio di Ankara. Nel mese di agosto scorso, il deficit commerciale della Turchia ha raggiunto i 2,48 miliardi di dollari, il dato mensile più basso negli ultimi nove anni, evidenzia il ministro del Commercio, Ruhsar Pekcan. “Nello stesso mese, il rapporto di copertura delle esportazioni rispetto alle importazioni ha raggiunto l’83,3 per cento”, ha aggiunto Pekcan. Per quanto riguarda le esportazioni, ad agosto hanno toccato i 12,4 miliardi di dollari, pari ad un calo annuo del 6,5 per cento. Per quanto riguarda le importazioni si è verificata una diminuzione del 22,4 per cento (14,8 miliardi di dollari). (Tua)
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La Turchia è molto importante dal punto di vista geopolitico, per cui o Erdogan si piega o temo per lui che farà una pessima fine. Gli USA non lasceranno mai che la Turchia cada sotto l'area di influenza russa! Per adesso siamo ancora alla pressione finanziaria ...
Per quel che ci riguarda (io sono dentro) se Erdogan è lungimirante la situazione rientrerà ed i bond risaliranno velocemente (ovviamente non sappiamo quanto giù possono ancora andare). Se invece vuol fare il furbo andrà incontro alla destabilizzazione del suo paese e per i nostri bond saranno problemi seri. Propendo per la prima opzione, al momento... (ihmo).
 
Erdogan: necessario porre fine al dominio del dollaro nel commercio mondiale

Erdogan: necessario porre fine al dominio del dollaro nel commercio mondiale
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Sognare non costa nulla.
Vedo che nel 2016 i famosi BRICS scambiano in valuta locale meno del 10% (del 200%) e (mi sembra inverosimile) di quelle valute solo lo yuan cinese scambiava più della lira turca.
 
The Turkish Lira Faces an Unwelcome Reminder
Inflation data on Monday will highlight the inadequacies in central bank policy.

The Turkish lira is due for a reality check on Monday.



August inflation data will probably show another big jump, this time to an annual rate of more than 17 percent, according to a Bloomberg News survey. Ouch.






The principal cause of the lira’s weakness has been the central bank's refusal to put interest rates high enough to contain runaway consumer prices. So, on Monday, everyone will get a nice reminder that policy makers haven’t acted quickly enough to control inflation.
Turkish Inflation Accelerates
The Bloomberg survey for August CPI forecasts another big gain, to a 17.6% annual pace
They’ll also get a sense of where price gains are headed, and here the picture looks grim. Producer prices are the best leading indicator for consumer prices. PPI probably rose last month from July's 25 percent annual rate, as the lira weakened substantially. Add to this a rise in oil prices of almost 6 percent in August, and a higher consumer inflation rate seems locked in.

A Bad Omen for Turkish Consumer Prices

Producer price inflation, which usually leads consumer prices, is worryingly high

The Turkish central bank’s next monetary policy decision is on Sept. 13. And with three-month money market yields at around 25 percent, it may appear that investors are pricing in a rate increase. That would be a mistake – the real reason yields are higher is that investors have fled.

Turkish Curve Shows the Strain
Bond yields have risen as much as 1000 basis points over the last five months


The Turkish authorities have responded to the crisis in roughly two ways: first, by claiming that the nation is the victim of a financial attack from abroad, most specifically from the U.S., and second, by tinkering with tax and foreign currency liquidity measures.

Neither of these will put a floor under the currency. If the central bank continues to be prevented from raising rates substantially, then this crisis will only get worse.

A Warning From Turkey's Inverted CDS
The annual cost of insuring against a Turkey default within one year is higher than the annual cost for insuring against default in five years


The consequences of letting inflation rip and the currency collapse are piling up. The costs for Turkey's banks have been punitive.



Turkish Bank Credit Spreads
The dollar credit curve has inverted for Turkish banks - a sign of serious stress
The cost for Turkish companies is mounting as the lira weakens.

October Stress Test
The weaker lira jeopardizes the finances of many Turkish borrowers

The risk is that a default or failure to pay comes sooner rather than later. Banks and companies have considerable foreign currency maturities that will soon need to be refinanced at much higher rates – and that is only if foreign investors are prepared to take the exposure.

A large corporate default could cause major liquidity problems for lenders, triggering a chain reaction that would be hard to stop. This is why a currency freefall in a country that’s so dependent on borrowing abroad is so dangerous

The central bank's restrictions on foreign currency liquidity have made it much more expensive to hedge out lira exposure when buying a Turkish asset. While this may be useful for keeping the short sellers at bay, the measure could backfire horribly if it prevents foreign investors from buying Turkish assets unless they take full lira exposure.

susceptible to currency fluctuations. Were the currency to depreciate 40 percent in one year, debt servicing costs for non-financial companies would rise by $13.3 billion, he estimates. The real damage will likely be higher, since the currency is down 70 percent this year.


A rate hike won't solve Turkey's self-inflicted crisis but it would be the minimum step to prevent it getting even worse. Argentina's inability to control the peso's freefall despite hiking rates to 60 percent is a clear illustration of the consequences of doing too little, too late. One hopes the Turkish central bank is taking note.


Bloomberg Opinion

 

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