By CentralBankNews.info
Turkey’s’ central bank maintained its benchmark one-week repo rate a 8.0 percent but raised two of its lending rates “to contain the deterioration in the inflation outlook” from the depreciation of the lira’s exchange rate and said it would tighten monetary policy further if needed.
The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) raised its repo rate by 50 basis points in November last year and was widely expected to raise it further today in light of a continued depreciation of the exchange rate of the lira due to the fallout from last year’s failed military coup and concern over the independence of the central bank in the face of political pressure for rate cuts.
The lira weakened by almost 1 percent to 3.78 to the U.S. dollar in an immediate response to the central bank’s limited tightening measures to be down almost 6 percent since the start of this year. Since the start of 2016 the lira has depreciated 22 percent.
“Excessive fluctuations in exchange rates since the previous meeting have increased the upside risks regarding the inflation outlook,” the CBRT said.
Turkey’s inflation rate rose to 8.53 percent in December from 7.0 percent in November and the CBRT said it expects the “significant” rise in inflation to continue in the short term due to the lagged effect of higher import prices on consumer prices.
It added that it would take “necessary liquidity measures” in the event of “unhealthy” behavior in the foreign exchange market.
In today’s move the CBRT raised its overnight funding rate by 75 basis points to 9.25 percent and the late liquidity lending rate by 100 basis points to 11.0 percent. The overnight borrowing rate was left at 7.25 percent and the late liquidity borrowing rate at 0 percent.
Prior to the election of Donald Trump as U.S. President in November, the central bank had been slowly lowering the overnight funding rate by 250 basis points since March 2016 as inflation had been decelerating amidst the bank’s effort to simplify its rate structure.
But amidst a general weakening of emerging market currencies following the U.S. election, the CBRT in November raised its key repo rate in the first change to this rate since February 2015.
The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey issued the following statement: