logo
Turkish inflation expectations tick up after market turmoil: Reuters poll

Turkish inflation expectations tick up after market turmoil: Reuters poll

Reuters26-03-2025
ISTANBUL, March 26 (Reuters) - Turkish inflation is expected to end the year a bit higher than previously expected, a Reuters poll showed on Wednesday, reflecting fallout from a currency selloff after authorities detained and jailed Istanbul's mayor last week.
Based on the median forecast of nine poll respondents, year-end inflation is seen at 29.75%, up one percentage point from the previous poll, due to fallout from market volatility last week in which Turkish assets fell.
The lira dropped as much as 12% on Wednesday last week after Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu - President Tayyip Erdogan's chief political rival - was charged, detained and later jailed pending a trial in moves that raised concerns over rule of law.
The forecasts suggest a risk to an economic picture in which both inflation and interest rates were heading lower as part of an orthodox economic programme that promised Turks future relief after years of soaring prices and currency crashes.
The annual rate is expected to fall to 38.9% in March from February's 39.05%, the Reuters poll showed. The monthly inflation rate is seen edging up to 3% based on the median, with forecasts ranging from 2.7% to 3.56%.
Lira briefly touched a record low of 42 against the U.S. dollar last Wednesday though later recovered most of those losses. It has since remained near 38 due to central bank steps to stabilise it.
The central bank tightened its funding rate by 400 basis points and sold some $27 billion in foreign reserves since the mayor's arrest, data shows. It expects year-end inflation of 24% based on its February forecast.
Wall Street bank Morgan Stanley said the "front-loaded currency depreciation" will likely lift inflation readings mainly in April and May.
"Provided that FX pressures remain contained, and inflationary pressures start easing from June, the (central bank) may have room to restart cuts in June," it wrote.
Morgan Stanley also said they've revised up their end-year policy rate forecast to 33.5% from 30.5% previously.
EASING CYCLE
The next central bank policy rate decision is set to April 17 when it could slow, pause or even reverse its easing cycle, analysts say. It held an unscheduled meeting last week to hike the overnight borrowing rate.
The central bank has initiated an easing cycle and cut its policy rate to 42.5% gradually in the past three scheduled meetings. Before that, since mid-2023, it raised the rate 4,150 basis points to cool inflation in a shift to orthodox policy, after years of low rates aimed at fostering growth.
Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek and Central Bank Governor Fatih Karahan told investors on a call Tuesday that they expect especially the April inflation reading to be somewhat higher due to the lira's 4% depreciation, a participant said.
They see a 40% "pass through" rate, which measures how much the depreciation lifts prices mostly via imports.
Another signal that the market turmoil may have shaken Turks' confidence in price relief came from the Koc University Household Inflation Expectations Survey conducted between March 15 and 19 last week.
On March 19 - the day Imamoglu was detained and the lira sold off - "we observed a noticeable shift in the overall sentiment...indicating that the political crisis is being reflected in household expectations," said Selva Demiralp, a Koc professor who leads the survey.
The March survey data, which tracks annual and year-end expectations, it not yet released. In recent months it and other surveys have shown still-lofty expectations ticking down.
The Turkish Statistical Institute will release March inflation data at 0700 GMT on April 3.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Shares in Rolls-Royce soar after engine fixes drive profit upgrade
Shares in Rolls-Royce soar after engine fixes drive profit upgrade

Reuters

time31 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Shares in Rolls-Royce soar after engine fixes drive profit upgrade

LONDON, July 31 (Reuters) - British aero-engineer Rolls-Royce (RR.L), opens new tab raised its full-year profit and cash flow outlook on Thursday after improvements to its widebody jet engines drove strong first-half results, pushing its shares to an all-time high. The stocks were up 9.1% at 0915 GMT after jumping 11%, continuing a stellar performance since Tufan Erginbilgic joined as chief executive in 2023 promising to revamp the company whose engines power Airbus's widebody planes and some Boeing 787s. The stock is up 400% in the last two years. Erginbilgic said his transformation was delivering and there were "substantial growth prospects beyond the mid-term". "We are expanding the earnings and cash potential of Rolls-Royce despite the challenges of supply chain and tariffs," he told reporters. The company raised the top end of its operating profit guidance by 300 million pounds ($400 million) to 3.2 billion pounds and its free cash flow by 200 million pounds to 3.1 billion pounds. Rolls had improved the time its engines spend "on wing" - when they are in operation before needing major maintenance - Erginbilgic said. That helps drive profits, as Rolls makes money from its engines' flying hours. By increasing durability, Rolls is expecting to deliver a more than 80% improvement in time on wing for its Trent engines by 2027. Problems with the Trent 1000, which powers the 787, has caused disruption for British Airways, Virgin Atlantic and others. Rolls competes with General Electric's GEnx-1B on 787s. It said an improved blade certified in June would more than double the time on wing, although it cautioned that Trent 1000 shop visits would increase in the second half. After the upgrades, time on wing would increase to as much as six years, Erginbilgic said. "That makes the Trent 1000 a very, very competitive engine." Rolls' power systems business had grown by winning business from data centre and government customers, he said. The company's small modular reactor programme was selected last month by Britain to build three units. U.S President Trump said on Monday the technology was "interesting" when he met British Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Erginbilgic said the focus was on executing opportunities in Britain and the Czech Republic. "There is good demand on SMRs, even without the U.S.," he said. The company, which also has a defence business, reported underlying operating profit of 1.7 billion pounds for the first half, with an operating margin of 19.1%, up from 14.0%. ($1 = 0.7484 pounds)

Ghana central bank delivers record rate cut as inflation cools rapidly
Ghana central bank delivers record rate cut as inflation cools rapidly

Reuters

time36 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Ghana central bank delivers record rate cut as inflation cools rapidly

ACCRA, July 30 (Reuters) - Ghana's central bank slashed its benchmark interest rate (GHCBIR=ECI), opens new tab by 300 basis points to 25% on Wednesday, the largest cut in its history, as inflation slows at a record pace in the gold-, oil- and cocoa-producing economy. The Bank of Ghana said the move reflects growing confidence in the disinflation trend, which has seen consumer prices fall faster than ever before. It was the bank's first cut since September 2024 when it slashed the rate by 200 basis points, mirroring major advanced economies that began their easing cycles. However, price pressures forced the bank to hold and even raise the key rate at subsequent meetings. The West African nation is emerging from its most severe economic crisis in decades. Last month, consumer inflation dropped to 13.7% from 18.4% in May, reaching the lowest level since December 2021. Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Johnson Asiama, told a press conference on Wednesday that macroeconomic conditions have significantly improved with inflation expectations broadly anchored. "Given these considerations, the MPC (Monetary Policy Committee), by a majority decision, voted to lower the monetary policy rate by 300 basis points to 25%," Asiama said. He added that inflation risks were expected to be mitigated through appropriately managed monetary policy frameworks and ongoing fiscal consolidation efforts. The Bank of Ghana had been widely anticipated to reduce the rate by 200 basis points to 26%, according to a Reuters poll of 10 analysts. "It's the beginning of an easing cycle that should continue through the year, since inflation prospects will remain benign for a while," said Leslie Dwight Mensah, economist and research fellow at the Institute for Fiscal Studies. Razia Khan, chief economist for Africa and Middle East at Standard Chartered Bank, said she expects another 700 basis points of easing across the September and November meetings, to reach 18% by year-end. "While domestic utility price increases – which we expect in the (last quarter of the year), were flagged as a potential upside risk to inflation, we do not expect this to reverse Ghana's now well-established disinflation trend," Khan said.

Saudi budget deficit shrinks to $9.21 billion as oil, other revenues rise
Saudi budget deficit shrinks to $9.21 billion as oil, other revenues rise

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Saudi budget deficit shrinks to $9.21 billion as oil, other revenues rise

July 31 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's budget deficit narrowed to 34.534 billion riyals ($9.21 billion) in the second quarter, marking a 41.1% decline from the previous quarter, as oil and other revenues rose, the finance ministry said on Thursday. Oil income rose by 1.28% to reach 151.734 billion riyals, the ministry said. The world's top oil exporter saw its total revenues climb by nearly 14.4% to 301.595 billion riyals in April to June, of which 149.861 billion riyals came from non-oil industries, while public spending, rose 4.28% quarter-on-quarter to 336.129 billion riyals. The kingdom's oil exports in May rose to their highest in three months, data from the Joint Organizations Data Initiative (JODI) showed, as the OPEC+ group - comprising OPEC and allies such as Russia - began to unwind cuts of 2.17 million barrels per day (bpd) in April with a boost of 138,000 bpd, followed by further increases in recent months despite falling oil prices. In the first quarter, the kingdom's budget deficit widened significantly on a year-on-year basis to $15.65 billion from $3.30 billion in the same period a year earlier, as oil revenues dropped 18%. Lower oil prices have weighed on Saudi Arabia's revenue, with the kingdom projected to post a fiscal deficit of around $27 billion this year. Still, the country has pushed forward with spending on a massive economic transformation programme known as Vision 2030 that aims to diversify its revenue sources to wean its economy off its dependence on oil. A 12-day air war between Israel and Iran in June amplified geopolitical risk across the Gulf and raised concerns over regional stability that might threaten to slow foreign investments and tourism in the kingdom, though it briefly spiked oil prices by up to 7% on June 14 when the war first broke. In June, the International Monetary Fund raised its 2025 GDP growth forecast for Saudi Arabia to 3.5% from 3%, partly on the back of demand for government-led projects and supported by the OPEC+ group's plan to phase out oil production cuts. Saudi Arabia's public debt stood at 1.38 trillion riyals by the end of the second quarter, the finance ministry said in its statement. ($1 = 3.7511 riyals)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store