Obbligazioni valute high yield TURCHIA bond in usd e lira turca

Io non tifo per Erdogan, ci mancherebbe, ma nel passato mi sembra che sia riuscito a sistemare le cose a suo favore.
Il suo competior, guarda caso, è stato condannato.
Poi non mi fido molto dei sondaggi, dipendono molto da chi li commissiona.
Aspettiamo e vediamo, manca poco alle elezioni ed io mi preoccupo solo delle mie obbligazioni.

... appunto, le obbligazioni. Mi riferivo a quelle. Se non vince?
 
Ma hai notizie di chi possa insidiare la sua vittoria?
Tolto di mezzo con condanna giudiziaria Ekrem İmamoğlu chi può essere un valido competitor?
Io non trovo nomi all'altezza, tu sai qualcosa?

Ho letto i soliti sondaggi. Comunque ripropongo la domanda ai qui presenti detentori di bond.
Qualora Erdogan, non dovesse vincere, sarebbe, per i bondisti, cosa buona, o cosa non buona?
 
....dovevano entrare in 5 minuti...

Fumata nera sull’Alleanza Atlantica. La Svezia ha fatto sapere di non poter accettare le richieste avanzate dalla Turchia per consentire a Stoccolma di aderire alla Nato. Il primo ministro svedese Ulf Kristersson è stato chiaro. Resta adesso da capire quale sarà il futuro di Svezia e Finlandia e se saranno fatti ulteriori tentativi per scendere a patti con Ankara.
 
POLL-Turkey's current account deficit at $4.1 bln in November; $48 billion in 2022
06/01/2023 12:37 - RSF

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reuters://realtime/verb=Open/url=cpurl://apps.cp./Apps/econ-polls?RIC=TRCURA%3DECI
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ANKARA, Jan 6 (Reuters) - Turkey is expected to record a current account deficit of $4.1 billion in November, a Reuters poll showed on Friday, while the deficit was seen at $48 billion in 2022, after soaring energy prices derailed Ankara's plans to shore up the shortfall.

Turkey's trade deficit, a major component of the current account, widened %61.6 in November to $8.8 billion, data showed, mainly due to the sharp rise in gold imports and surging cost of energy imports.

In a Reuters poll, the median estimate of 11 economists for the current account deficit
in November was $4.1 billion, with forecasts ranging from $1.4 billion to $4.75 billion.

The median forecast for the deficit in 2022 stood at $48 billion, down slightly from a previous poll, with estimates ranging between $43 billion and $49 billion.

The year-end forecasts were revised higher throughout the year due to a potential further decline in exports and the expectation that energy prices will remain elevated. However the year-end median of the poll declined in the last couple of months.

Ankara sees the deficit at $47.3 billion this year, according to official forecasts announced in September, which would be highest since 2013 when the deficit was more than $55 billion.

In 2021, the deficit was $7.26 billion.

Under President Tayyip Erdogan's new plan, authorities are working to turn Turkey's chronic current account deficits to a surplus, which the central bank says will help establish price stability.

Global energy prices have made that goal all but unattainable in 2022 though authorities say a surplus will be achieved when energy prices normalise. In the three-year economic forecasts, the government sees the deficit narrowing only to $10 billion in 2025.

Turkey's central bank has cut its policy rate by 500 basis points last year to 9%, while inflation touched its decades peak. Inflation eased to 64.27% on base effect in December.

Turkey's central bank is scheduled to announce the November current account data at 0700 GMT on Jan 11.

(Reporting by Ezgi Erkoyun Editing by Ece Toksabay)
(([email protected]))
 
UPDATE 2-Sweden says Turkey asking too much over NATO application
Oggi 18:07 - RSF
(Updates with quotes from news conference)
STOCKHOLM, Jan 8 (Reuters) - Sweden is confident that Turkey will approve its application to join the NATO military alliance, but will not meet all the conditions Ankara has set for its support, Sweden's prime minister said on Sunday.

"Turkey both confirms that we have done what we said we would do, but they also say that they want things that we cannot or do not want to give them," Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson told a defence think-tank conference in Sweden.

Finland and Sweden signed a three-way agreement with Turkey in 2022 aimed at overcoming Ankara's objections to their membership of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

They applied in May to join NATO in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, but Turkey objected and accused the countries of harbouring militants, including from the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party
At a news conference later on Sunday, Kristersson said the demands that Sweden could not or did not want to fulfil were outside the scope of the three-way memorandum.

"From time to time, Turkey mentions individuals that they want to see extradited from Sweden. To that I have said that those issues are handled within Swedish law," he said.

Ankara expressed disappointment with a decision late last year from Sweden's top court to stop a request to extradite a journalist with alleged links to Islamic scholar Fetullah Gulen, blamed by Turkey for an attempted coup.

(Reporting by Johan Ahlander and Simon Johnson; editing by Barbara Lewis)
(([email protected]; +46 707 211027; Reuters Messaging: [email protected]))
 
RPT-POLL-Turkish factory activity shrinks for first time since 2020
Oggi 07:24 - RSF
(Repeats Jan 6 article with no changes to text)

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reuters://realtime/verb=Opener=cpurl://apps.cp./Apps/econ-polls?RIC=TRIP%3DECI
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ISTANBUL, Jan 6 (Reuters) - Turkey's industrial production index is expected to have shrunk year-on-year for the first time since 2020 in November, a Reuters poll showed on Friday, as a slowdown in some of Turkey's main trade partners hit factory activity.

Industrial activity had bounced back strongly after the initial coronavirus wave in April 2020 and has been expanding for more than two years straight since then. But annual growth has slowed significantly since the summer, with demand declining due to the wider global slowdown.

The median estimate in the Reuters poll of six institutions showed a year-on-year contraction of 0.95% in the calendar-adjusted industrial production index
in November.

Three economists expected the index, seen as a preliminary indicator of growth, to expand up to 1% while the other three expected a contraction of up to 2.8%.

President Tayyip Erdogan's economic programme prioritises growth, exports, investments and employment while cutting interest rates.

The central bank cut its policy rate by 500 basis points last year, lowering it to 9% after Erdogan called for a single- digit rate by year-end. The bank justified the cuts by saying financial conditions must remain supportive to maintain the growth in industrial production.

The index expanded 0.5% in September and 2.5% in October, indicating the impact of declining demand due to the global economic slowdown.

The Turkish Statistical Institute will announce November industrial production figures at 0700 GMT on Jan 10.

(Reporting by Ezgi Erkoyun Editing by Daren Butler)
(([email protected]))
 

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