|

Turkish Lira: Market doubts CBRT tightening resolve – Commerzbank

Commerzbank’s Tatha Ghose expects the Central Bank of the Republic of Türkiye (CBRT) to leave rates unchanged or only align the policy rate with effective funding, which he views as insufficient tightening. With monthly inflation still above 2.5% and reserves under pressure from FX intervention, he warns that reliance on macroprudential tools is inadequate and sees rising risk of a more disorderly Lira depreciation.

Insufficient tightening risks Lira weakness

"Turkey’s central bank (CBRT) will announce its rate decision today. Consensus is skewed towards no change, although a minority still expects a 300bp hike from 37% to 40%. Even if the bank were to move the policy rate to 40%, that would largely amount to aligning the repo rate with the current effective funding rate at the top of the corridor, rather than delivering a meaningful tightening in financial conditions."

"In our view, such a step would be only mildly constructive because we do not foresee that the lending rate would also be moved up from 40% to 43% and the repo facility left unused (which is the only combination resulting in effective tightening). With inflation dynamics still unfavourable, the key question is whether the CBRT is prepared to tighten decisively; a partial clean-up of the corridor framework at this stage would be too little too late."

"Our estimate suggests that seasonally-adjusted month-on-month change in prices remained above 2.5% m/m in May. While this marked a modest easing from April, when prices were hit by the full impact of the Iran-related oil shock, it would still rank among the stronger monthly readings of the year so far."

"In our assessment, however, greater reliance on macroprudential and secondary tools is unlikely to resolve the core problem. The Q2 inflation report already lifted the interim inflation target to 24.0% from 16.0%, and we would not rule out a further upward revision in Q3 and Q4."

"If that perception continues to dominate policy expectations, the risk of a more disorderly depreciation episode in the months ahead rises materially."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD clings to gains near 1.1550 ahead of ECB rate decision

EUR/USD trades in positive territory near 1.1550 in Thursday's European trading hours. Rising bets that the European Central Bank will deliver a rate hike after its June policy meeting, keeping the Euro underpinned against the US Dollar. The focus will be on the ECB's updated projections and Lagarde's words.

GBP/USD: Gains remain capped below 1.3400 ahead of US PPI

GBP/USD is consolidating the rebound below 1.3400 in the European session on Thursday. However, the upside potential appears limited amid increased hawkish Fed bets and looming Mideast geopolitical risks, which could limit the US Dollar's pullback ahead of US PPI data.

Gold steadies above YTD low on softer USD; bearish bias remains amid Fed hike bets

Gold fades a modest Asian session bounce to the $4,118 region, though it manages to hold above the lowest level since November 2025. A softer Core US Consumer Price Index eased concerns about a runaway inflation spiral, weighing on the US Dollar and prompting some intraday short-covering around the precious metal.

XRP and XLM: Mild recovery attempts emerge amid mixed market signals

Ripple (XRP) and Stellar (XLM) show mild signs of recovery on Thursday after extending losses earlier this week. XRP is holding above the $1.10 level as bearish momentum begins to fade, while XLM has bounced modestly from a key support zone.

European Central Bank set to hike interest rates for first time in nearly three years

The European Central Bank is set to announce its monetary policy decision at 12:15 GMT following its June meeting. The Frankfurt-based institution is widely expected to raise its key interest rates by 25 basis points, taking the deposit facility rate to 2.25% from 2%.

4.2% headline, 0.2% core: Why the Fed's next hike may be targeting the wrong problem

May's CPI put headline inflation at 4.2% on the year, up from 3.8% in April and the hottest reading since April 2023, while core prices rose just 0.2% on the month, undershooting the 0.3% consensus and halving April's pace.