Obbligazioni valute high yield TURCHIA bond in usd e lira turca

calo consistente sul tds in $
secondo voi può essere dovuto a un maggiore impegno militare in Siria?

Turkey sends more troops, tanks to Syria amid Idlib assault
Washington Post-2 ore fa

il cambio eur / try è stabile ma anche la EBRD ZC 2021 try oggi sta scendendo ....quindi forse è proprio questa tensione geopolitica il motivo , cmq leggo nell'art. da te postato che domani arriva delegazione russa in turchia per parlare appunto dei recenti episodi in siria ....speriamo trovino presto una soluzione condivisa
 
calo consistente sul tds in $
secondo voi può essere dovuto a un maggiore impegno militare in Siria?

Turkey sends more troops, tanks to Syria amid Idlib assault
Washington Post-2 ore fa


Markets
Turkey’s Defense Line Fails as Lira Slips Past 6 Per Dollar
By Constantine Courcoulas and Asli Kandemir
The Turkish lira weakened past the 6-per-dollar mark for the first time since late May, breaking through a key level that state banks have been defending.
February 7, 2020
 
Markets
Turkey’s Defense Line Fails as Lira Slips Past 6 Per Dollar
By
Constantine Courcoulas
and
Asli Kandemir
7 febbraio 2020, 15:50 CET Updated on 7 febbraio 2020, 16:56 CET

  • Turkish currency drops past crucial level first time since May

  • Local banks have been selling dollar to back lira, traders say
The Turkish lira weakened past the 6-per-dollar mark for the first time since late May, breaking through a key level that state banks have been defending.



The currency slipped as much as 1% to 6.0482 on Friday, with losses accelerating after a better-than-expected U.S. jobs report lifted the greenback against its major peers. The move comes despite domestic efforts to prop up the lira. State lenders have sold more than $2 billion this week, according to three traders with knowledge of the matter.

The interventions have helped the currency buck a rout spreading across emerging-markets. The lira has traded within a percent of the psychologically important level against the dollar all week, despite concern about the global economic impact of the coronavirus.



But the defense appeared to have reached its limits in late trading, with the currency briefly buckling as it tripped past 6 against the dollar. It pared some of its decline and was trading at 6.0222 per dollar as of 6:55 p.m. in Istanbul.



Last week, S&P Global Ratings classified Turkey’s foreign-currency regime as a “managed float,” citing interventions by state banks and limits introduced by regulators on local banks’ derivative positions with non-residents, designed to stand in the way of short sellers.


Dovranno fare le riforme e rialzare i tassi.(Allah permettendo:-D:-D:-D)
 
Economics
As Foreigners Flee Turkey Debt, Central Bank Helps Fill Void
By
Constantine Courcoulas
and
Tugce Ozsoy
4 febbraio 2020, 07:00 CET Updated on 4 febbraio 2020, 14:44 CET


The Turkish central bank has kicked off its biggest government debt buybacks in over a decade, helping fill a void left by foreigners and adding momentum to the developing world’s strongest bond rally this year.



announced plans to almost double the amount of government debt on its balance sheet to 5% of total assets, which currently works out to 33.3 billion liras. According to Bloomberg calculations, it would need to purchase around 17 billion liras of the securities through the end of the year to reach that goal, when redemptions are taken into account.

“We think these transactions, in addition to managing liquidity, will have an effect similar to quantitative easing and will impact financial conditions,” said Erkin Isik, chief economist at QNB Finansbank in Istanbul.


The emergence of the central bank as a buyer has loomed large in a market that foreigners have been abandoning in droves. Data last week showed outside investors sold Turkish bonds for a fifth week running, bringing total outflows over the past year to more than $3.3 billion and driving their share in the local-currency debt market to an all-time low of 11%.

The purchases are intensifying at a time when local pension funds and primary dealers clamor to increase their holdings amid a dearth of long-dated issuance. The Turkish Treasury hasn’t sold a 10-year bond in 18 months and isn’t slated to offer one at least through April, putting downward pressure on government borrowing costs.


Absorbing Risk
“By absorbing interest risk from the market -- in size like it’s doing now -- the central bank is essentially giving banks more room to do other things, like extend loans,” Isik said.

But after five rounds of massive monetary easing, combined with three months of accelerating inflation, Turkey’s real rate now stands below zero, raising concern that the central bank risks loosening its stance more than warranted. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly said that policy rates will fall into single digits this year.

“The rally is, first, unsustainable,” said Lutz Roehmeyer, chief investment officer of Capitulum Asset Management in Berlin. “And, second, foreigners still have big doubts about the economics and politics, even fear non-convertibility of the lira or blocking of bonds in case of U.S. sanctions.


In an effort to prop up the lira, state banks have flooded the market with dollars at moments of heightened volatility in the currency, a move that prompted S&P Global Ratings to classify Turkey’s foreign-exchange regime on Friday as a “managed float.” Last year, authorities engineered a liquidity squeeze in the offshore swap market to stand in the way of foreign short-sellers.


The yield on Turkey’s 10-year local currency bonds added 1 basis point on Tuesday, trimming this year’s drop to 193 basis points.

International investors are already “out of bonds to sell,” according to Viktor Szabo, an investment director at Aberdeen Asset Management in London.

“For foreigners, Turkish government bonds don’t look like a very attractive proposition,” he said. “The central bank’s inflation-targeting track record is appalling, and the currency is artificially kept so strong.”



Continuano a fare i giochini ma anche questi vanno a breve a finire.
 
ANKARA/ISTANBUL, Feb 6 (Reuters) - Turkey has managed to impose stability on its currency after two years of crisis and aftershocks, a turnaround the government hopes will rebuild trust among Turks who have shunned the lira even as some investors question its true value.

Last week, the lira's one-month implied volatility tmsnrt.rs/380VfOo fell to its lowest since mid-2013, dipping below many of its emerging-market peers, including Russia's rouble.

A drop in the current account deficit combined with a series of government moves - including curbs on foreign-exchange transactions and Turkish state banks selling tens of billions of dollars - have helped steady the currency.

The moves have also squeezed out foreigners, who last year pulled $3.3 billion from the bond markets of what was once a darling of emerging-market investors.

Ankara hopes its firmer grip on the lira will convince Turks to reverse a “dollarization” trend that lifted foreign currency deposits to another record last month at $197 billion.

Hard currencies now make up more than half of locals’ deposits, leaving the lira vulnerable to another bout of weakness and creating a speed bump as Turkey’s economy accelerates out of recession, economists say.

“The script now in Turkey is for managed markets, with foreigners pushed out, (and) this strategy is working to an extent,” said Tim Ash, strategist at BlueBay Asset Management.

A Turkish banker who requested anonymity said the oddly low volatility reflects “the disappearance of foreigners’ hot money positions.”

The lira has weakened 36% in two years and briefly shed half its value during the 2018 crisis that tipped Turkey’s economy into recession.
 
Oggi emissione di 2 bond governativi in dollari

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