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bne February 2019 Companies & Markets I 17
23%. Finansbank is currently the fourth largest lender on the BIST with a market cap of TRY24.15bn. Qatar National Bank (QNB) owns 99.88% of Finansbank with only a small part of its shares on free-float, according to the KAP.
Denizbank was Turkey’s 9th largest bank with TRY147bn worth of total assets at end-September while Finansbank ranked in 8th place with TRY181bn. Isbank was the country’s second largest bank, following state-owned Ziraat Bankasi, with assets worth TRY444bn, according to the latest data from Turkish banking association TBB.
Garanti is third with TRY411bn in assets and Akbank is fourth with TRY392.5bn in assets.
Market anomalies the new ‘normal’ under executive presidency
It seems like market anomalies are very thoroughly the
new ‘normal’ under the Turkish-type full-blown executive presidency system introduced following June’s snap elections.
“Statistics, indicators would be conflictive in an environment where perceptions are controlled by the government,” Korkut Boratav – an economy professor widely regarded
as a doyen in his field – told daily Birgun on December 1, adding: “Bankruptcy protection applications rise while the FX is cheapening... Unemployment in the construction industry jumps while home sales are growing... Loan usage declines while lending rates are falling...”
December 4 saw the lira slip roughly 3% d/d to around 5.40 lev- els after the statistics institute TUIK on December 3 reported a surprisingly strong reduction in its annual consumer price infla- tion rate. The surprising extent of the drop in headline inflation triggered anxieties that a premature policy rate cut could be on the cards in the run-up to the March 31, 2019 local elections. That put the frighteners on the currency market.
On December 5, market comments suggested that the local currency retreated after the central bank said in its regular Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy for 2019 that it was sticking with its absurd 5% inflation target even though the annual inflation rate remains above 20%.
“The [Central] Bank shall determine the inflation target together with the Government,” according to the current law on the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey. Looking ahead, the market can therefore not at all expect a change in the inflation target to be solely set by the central bank in its regular monetary strategy release.
“Hot money giveth...”
“USDTRY +4.2% since Nov. 29... Hot money giveth, hot money taketh away...,” Taylan Bilgic of Bloomberg observed on December 5 on Twitter.
There is considerable cognitive dissonance on the markets in that there is much discussion of, for instance, how the central
bank has hiked its policy rates more than 1,000 bp this year, with a blithe lack of acknowledgement and factoring in of previous criticisms that the rate-setters were in fact very likely not entirely in control of monetary policy given stark comments on political interference that have come out of the Erdogan administration. And the patent situation is still that no-one can be quite sure how much independence the regulator has in monetary matters.
“It is a positive commitment but it doesn’t mean [the Turkish central bank] will not cut [the policy rate] if FX appreciates,” Guillaume Tresca of Credit Agricole told Bloomberg on December 5, responding to the latest standpoint outlined by the central bank, adding: “The real test is the December MPC [Monetary Policy Committee to be held on December 13]. The [central bank] has not showed it was independent over the past months. It takes time to build credibility.”
It is also stated on the markets that the confirmation of the tight fiscal policy outlook on December 5 by the Financial Stability and Development Board (FIKKO) has helped with the lira recovery.
FIKKO is led by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s son- in-law Berat Albayrak, who serves as the finance minister. “Sold off on back of no real news”
“Sold off on back of no real news, and rallying back on back of no new news,” Timothy Ash of Bluebay Asset Management said on December 5 in an emailed comment to investors, noting the latest weakening of the lira after fear of monetary backsliding spread.
The TRY, which has lately led currency fluctuations across the emerging markets universe in both directions, was trading at 5.2869 against the USD, stronger by 0.50% d/d, as of 18:00 local time on December 7.
It was trading in the 5.10s last week while its all-time weak rate of 7.24 to the dollar occurred on August 23.
“We expect the [central bank] to remain on hold this month, while it will likely maintain its hawkish bias with a promise to deliver policy tightening if needed. This is due to continuing challenges on the inflation front, the risk of the TRY com- ing under pressure again, low reserves and currently fragile capital flows. So the [central bank] will remain in a wait- and-see mode and closely watch price and financial stabil-
ity risks, as well as the ongoing deterioration in the growth outlook,” Muhammet Mercan of ING Bank said on December 7 in a research note.
“Signs of softer inflation and weak economic activity will almost certainly prompt the Turkish MPC to strike a dovish tone at Thursday’s meeting. Investors seem to share our concerns that policymakers will move too quickly to loosen policy and fail to tackle the country’s inflation problem,” Jason Tuvey of Capital Economics said also on December 7 in a research note.
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