Obbligazioni valute high yield TURCHIA bond in usd e lira turca

UPDATE 2-Turkey opposition contests thousands of ballots after election
Oggi 12:15 - RSF

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Main opposition raises objections over suspected irregularities


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Says irregularities not sufficient to alter overall results


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Ally says opposition should focus on campaigning for runoff


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Erdogan is in pole position to win May 28 runoff



(Adds DEVA Party official saying objections may not alter results)
By Huseyin Hayatsever and Burcu Karakas
ANKARA, May 17 (Reuters) - Turkey's main opposition party said on Wednesday it had filed complaints over suspected irregularities at thousands of ballot boxes in Sunday's landmark elections, in which President Tayyip Erdogan performed better than expected.

However, opposition party officials said the objections were unlikely to alter the result of the presidential vote, which is headed to a runoff on May 28 between Erdogan and challenger Kemal Kilicdaroglu.


Muharrem Erkek, a deputy chairman of the secularist Republican People's Party (CHP), said irregularities at each ballot box ranged from one single wrongly counted vote to hundreds of such votes.

He said the CHP had formally raised objections over 2,269 ballot boxes nationwide for the presidential election and 4,825 for the parliamentary vote that also took place on Sunday, though they represent a tiny proportion of the total number.

"We are following every single vote, even if it does not change the overall results," Erkek told reporters in Ankara.


Erdogan's ruling Islamist-rooted AK Party and its nationalist allies won a strong parliamentary majority, while in the presidential vote, Erdogan fell just shy of the 50% threshold needed to win outright.

Kilicdaroglu, the CHP chair, received 44.9% in what was seen as the biggest electoral challenge to Erdogan's 20-year rule. A third candidate, Sinan Ogan obtained 5.17%.

Erdogan, now in pole position, says only he can ensure stability in Turkey, a NATO member state, as it grapples with a cost-of-living crisis, soaring inflation and the impact of devastating earthquakes in February.

The opposition alliance that includes the CHP has urged young voters to turn out to support Kilicdaroglu in the runoff.

Mehmet Emin Ekmen, a deputy chairman of DEVA, one of six parties in the opposition alliance, told Reuters: "We do not have strong evidence to say irregularities can change the presidential race results or get another opposition candidate elected to the parliament".


"Since Erdogan officially started his election campaign yesterday, I believe the opposition alliance should also channel its energy into the runoff," he said.

(Additional reporting by Ali Kucukgocmen in Ankara; Editing by Jonathan Spicer and Gareth Jones)
(([email protected] , @alikucukgocmen; +905319306206; Reuters Messaging: Reuters Messaging: [email protected]))
 
UPDATE 3-Turkey's market rout deepens after Erdogan's strong election showing
Oggi 00:30 - RSF

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Turkish assets fall again as Erdogan seen extending rule


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Banking stocks close nearly 8% lower


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Lira nudges closer to March record intraday low



(Updates prices throughout, updates lira graphic, adds rates futures swaps in paragraph 11)
By Libby George and Canan Sevgili
LONDON, May 16 (Reuters) - Turkey's market rout deepened on Tuesday amid investor expectations that President Tayyip Erdogan could be able to extend his rule - and his unorthodox economic policies - into a third decade.

Banking stocks and sovereign dollar bonds slid for a second day and the cost of insuring exposure to Turkish debt rose further after Erdogan defied expectations in Sunday's presidential race, securing just under the 50% threshold needed to win outright and giving him the lead over opposition rival Kemal Kilicdaroglu, ahead of the May 28 runoff vote.

"Markets are now reacting to the fact that we're probably going to get a return to the previous administration and a continuity of the policies that have made Turkey almost un-investable as far as Western fund managers are concerned," said Jon Harrison, managing director of emerging market macro strategy at TS Lombard.

Ahead of the elections, opinion polls showed Kilicdaroglu in the lead, with investors expecting him to scrap some of Erdogan's economic policies, including costly efforts to prop up the lira currency.

The lira, which analysts say has become increasingly managed by the Turkish authorities over the last year, set yet another record closing low of 19.724
after touching 19.744, not far from the intraday record low of 19.80 hit in March.

Longer-dated, dollar-denominated government bonds had the biggest falls in fixed-income markets, although key corporate and banking sector bonds also edged lower.

The government's 2045-maturing bond dropped 3 cents to trade at 71 cents on the dollar. Five-year credit default swaps, which indicate the price of insuring government debt against default, climbed to 653 basis points, up 19 bps from Monday's close and 161 bps above Friday's pre-election level.


Credit ratings agency Fitch said the political and economic uncertainty would continue at least until after the runoff, and that its focus regarding Turkey's "B"/Negative sovereign rating after the election would be whether the policy mix "becomes more credible and consistent."
Turkey's interest rate swap forwards, which are a rough guide for where traders expect the country's interest rates to be once "risk premia" is added on, are now pricing them at around 27% in a year's time, compared with a pre-election level of over 40%.

Banking stocks, which had surged 26% in the week ahead of the election, closed just under 8% lower

Shares of Yapi Kredi , Is Bank and Akbank plunged more than 9%.

Mining company Koza Madencilik and steel producer Kardemir were among the best performers on the BIST-100 index, rising nearly 10% each%.

The overall Istanbul bourse index

"Continued capital controls and effective FX interventions, albeit unsustainable, should mean less volatility in the shortest end of Turkish asset prices," Erik Meyersson, chief emerging markets strategist with SEB Bank, wrote in a note.

"That said, the unsustainability of the current policy environment is highly negative in anything longer than the shortest of time horizons, and we cannot rule out a sharp adjustment in Turkish asset prices within a year."


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(Reporting by Libby George in London and Canan Sevgili Additional reporting by Karin Strohecker and Marc Jones in London, Azra Ceylan in Istanbul, Amruta Khandekar in Bengaluru and Rodrigo Campos in New York Editing by Sharon Singleton and Matthew Lewis)
(([email protected]; @RodrigoCampos;))
 
Turkey's dollar bonds sink as post-election rout extends
Oggi 11:31 - RSF
LONDON, May 17 (Reuters) - Turkey's dollar-denominated sovereign bonds took another tumble on Wednesday, with most sinking to six-month lows as the post-election market rout extended into a third session, following President Tayyip Erdogan's strong showing.

The selling kicked in again as Turkey's main opposition party said it had filed complaints over suspected irregularities at thousands of ballot boxes in Sunday's landmark election, in which Erdogan performed better than expected.

Bonds maturing in 2038 or beyond suffered some of the sharpest falls, dropping by 2 cents or more, Tradeweb data showed.

Longer-dated issues maturing 2041 broadly now trade below the 70 cents in the dollar mark, a level some analysts view as distressed territory.

The cost of insuring exposure to Turkey's debt via credit default swaps also nudged 2 basis points higher from Tuesday's close to 659 bps, data from S&P Global Market Intelligence showed.
It was around 480 bps before the election.

(Reporting by Karin Strohecker; editing by Marc Jones)
(([email protected]; +442075427262; Reuters Messaging: [email protected]))
 
Turkey's lira, which has been under pressure since election results leave open the possibility of President Tayyip Erdogan extending his time in office - and his unorthodox economic policies - hit a 10-week low of 19.75 per dollar.
 

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