This page has been archived and commenting is disabled.
EM FX Bloodbath Continues As Lira Slides To New Low, Tenge Plunges
In the four weeks since China shifted to a new currency regime, the pressure on emerging markets and commodity currencies has been both palpable and persistent.
The possibility (however unlikely) that the Fed might make a “policy error” this month by hiking rates and accelerating outflows from EMs has only made the situation worse as has the growing realization that China’s economy may be decelerating faster than even the most pessimistic observers had suspected.
And there are of course idiosyncratic, country-specific factors such as the political turmoil in Turkey, Malaysia, and Brazil and the disconnect between the ruble and the Kazakh tenge, with the latter having finally forced Kazakhstan to move to a free float last month as the yuan devaluation was the straw that broke the camel’s back for central Asia’s largest energy exporter who was already suffering from a severe reduction in trade competitiveness thanks to the tenge’s relative overvaluation.
After regaining its footing, the tenge has hit the skids again, with Monday marking the seventh consecutive day of losses.
On Friday, Sabit Khakimzhanov, head of research at Halyk Finance, told Bloomberg that with tax payments in the rearview, the tenge re-entered the crosshairs:
Local companies accumulated the currency for tax payments. Now that the tax payments are over and the government is transferring cash to local government accounts and to pay civil servants’ salaries, there are more tenge in circulation, which is pushing the price down.
On Monday, with the tenge plunging by nearly 8%, Khakimzhanov says rates are simply too low in Kazakhstan to take the pressure off. From 12%, rates would need to rise by at least 400 bps to change the market’s perception another analyst contends. Here’s Bloomberg again:
The central bank interest rate is “too low,” Sabit Khakimzhanov, head of research at Halyk Finance, a unit of the country’s second-largest lender by assets, said via phone. “If interest rates stay so low, the weakening of the tenge will continue and we will leapfrog Russia.”
Contrast that with comments out of Citi earlier this month after the NBK introduced the new base rate: "The 12% base rate looks elevated against the backdrop of below-target inflation, but is consistent with NBK’s medium-term outlook."
In any event, one country where rates are almost certainly too low given the confluence of factors weighing on the currency is Turkey. The country’s central bank had an opportunity to stem the lira’s decline last month, but balked, instead insisting that Turkey would not hike until the Fed moves. That, combined with a poorly communicated strategy regarding how the country plans to react to DM policy normalization, rattled the market significantly and the lira’s slide continued unabated with political upheaval and escalating violence serving to exacerbate an already precarious FX situation.
For their part, Citi is "puzzled by the CBT’s ever-growing tolerance for a weaker lira":
All in all, we believe that the CBT doesn’t have the luxury to carry out a gradual experiment under current circumstances. Our findings suggest that conditions are ripe for a rate hike and that, under current conditions, the CBT’s single policy should be around 11% or even higher. We believe that weak capital inflows and the challenging inflation outlook will test the CBT’s resolve to keep its wait-and-see approach. It is, however, clear to us that delaying a rate hike is likely to require an even sharper response later – a painful experience that the markets endured at least twice during the CBT’s bumpy unorthodox journey.
The pain continued on Monday as the lira hit a new record low in the wake of Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu's re-election as AKP chairman at a party conference which also saw Erdogan loyalists named to executive committees, underscoring the strongman’s iron grip on Turkish politics. In a hilariously absurd piece of agitprop, Davutoglu said that "suddenly, the PKK, the DHKP-C, the Islamic State, with their foreign support, pressed the button to destroy all of the accomplishments of the AK Party's 12, 13 years in power.”
“While they are taking action to achieve their evil aims, the AK Party cadres are taking action for a new democracy on Nov. 1,” Davutoglu added. That, of course, couldn’t be further from the truth. It was in fact Erdogan who “suddenly” decided to “press the button” that sent the country careening into chaos and the weak lira is a reflection of that.
Meanwhile, the central bank has remained obstinate, choosing to eschew an emergency rate hike even as market calls for action have grown quite loud. Here’s a bit of color from Nomura (via Bloomberg):
Turkish central bank’s reluctance to raise interest rates before Nov. 1 general election means the lira “might end up taking the strain,” Nomura’s Tim Ash says by e-mail.
- "The central bank will only look to move if the TRY underperforms its EM peers, and ends up appearing the EMFX front line. Today, that appears to be the case’’
- If Fitch downgrades Turkey, central bank might be forced to repeat its emergency rate hike of Jan. 2014 to try and stem losses in the lira - “bad for growth, and not really helping the AKP’s re-election chances”
- AKP’s leadership convention over weekend shows President Recep Tayyip Erdogan retains his grip over the party, “and the future of Babacan, Simsek, et al is unclear”
- "Turkish markets will remain under pressure now until re-run elections, and some resolution on the domestic political front’’
Moving away from the specifics, it's important to reiterate that these are precisely the types of fragile situations which make it extraordinarily difficult for the Fed to embark on a rate hike cycle.
After seven years, ZIRP has become the norm and unconventional monetary policy has become not only conventional, but expected. In other words, there's a certain degree to which the "normalization" of Fed policy is actually a move towards something that's very abnormal in the post-crisis world. Just as we would suspect that ZIRP and trillions in QE would have a dramatic effect (if only on asset prices and flows) when suddenly brought to bear on markets which had never seen such a vast experiment in monetary insanity, so too should we expect the rollback of those policies to have an equally dramatic (but now inverse) effect on markets which have spent the better part of a decade under the new normal.
- 14430 reads
- Printer-friendly version
- Send to friend
- advertisements -




Erdogan will try to divert attention from spiraling economic problems by more war. Turkey is well on its way to being a failed state.
A million more refugees for Germany will come from Turkey.
Let the good times roll according to America's captive press as the world outside Obama's Oval Office (complete with prayer mat) sinks into war and refugees fleeing those Obama-created wars.
United States captive press not America. America has been in Guantanamo for a very long time.
GOT PM'S
http://www.24hgold.com/english/gold_silver_prices_charts.aspx?money=try#
http://www.24hgold.com/english/gold_silver_prices_charts.aspx?money=KZT&...
I think Turkey is on the path to a civil war. And also a war with some of its neighbours. Europe has immense problems for standing loyally behind the American lunatic behaviour towards the middle east and also Ukraine.
In other words fermenting and bubbling everywhere.
I hope cool heads will prevail, if not, third world war is around the corner.
Come to think of it, that might have been the agenda all along.
I guess when JPM's Matejka said ...we like Turkey he meant Thanksgiving Turkey.
Turkey cannot be lost by Nato or the Western countries. They will allow the most horrific human rights abuses to happen. Without Turkey, the whole pipeline strategy to defeat Russia will fail and they have invested too much already into this.
If Turkey sinks into a civil war (hopefully), 75 million all fighting each other, millions of refugess heading to Europe...will the U.S. bomb them (Why would they you might ask? Because THAT'S what the U.S. do best is my reply!), after all Turkey is a NATO country, effectivley that should mean that all the other NATO countries would rush to its protection. Now that I'd like to see, U.S.A. V's NATO.
...Putin Check and Mate.
Fuck ZATO.
Political turmoil could engulf the whole of Europe if the migrant crisis triggers civil unrest and a collapse in confidence.
Tenge Fever.
1oz Silver American Eagle €12 @ EurGold
https://www.eurgold.eu/silver/american-eagle-1oz-silver-coin-1-dollar-le...
This asshole's been at it for quite a while now.
The Tylers Durden seem to like it. What other explanation is there?
From: http://www.zerohedge.com/search/user_comments?username=EurGold -
Post date ID Author Title 09/14/2015 - 09:01 6545574 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €12 09/14/2015 - 09:01 6545573 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €12 09/14/2015 - 09:01 6545570 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €12 09/14/2015 - 09:01 6545568 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €12 09/14/2015 - 08:59 6545563 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €12 09/14/2015 - 08:59 6545562 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €12 09/14/2015 - 07:16 6545296 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €12 09/14/2015 - 06:22 6545220 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €12 09/14/2015 - 02:11 6545004 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €12 09/14/2015 - 02:11 6545002 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €12 09/14/2015 - 02:10 6545001 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €12 09/14/2015 - 02:10 6544998 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €12 09/14/2015 - 02:10 6544997 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €12 09/13/2015 - 13:52 6542610 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €13 09/13/2015 - 12:09 6542212 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €13 09/13/2015 - 12:08 6542210 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €13 09/13/2015 - 12:08 6542209 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €13 09/13/2015 - 12:08 6542207 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €13 09/13/2015 - 12:08 6542206 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €13 09/13/2015 - 07:32 6541649 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €13 09/13/2015 - 07:18 6541636 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €13 09/13/2015 - 07:18 6541635 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €13 09/13/2015 - 07:18 6541634 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €13 09/13/2015 - 07:17 6541632 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €13 09/13/2015 - 07:17 6541631 EurGold 1oz Silver American Eagle €13Let me guess. The reason your rates are so low is that you don't spend money on advertising? Cheaper to shill for free on other sites' comments section?
Fragile situations? The only way to find strength is to get rid of weakness. It will cost. It will hurt. The soone the cheaper. It has already been too long.
Russia has information that the US know the specific location points of the "Islamic State" (extremist organization banned in Russia), but did not give an order to strike on the positions "of the IS," said Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.
http://fortruss.blogspot.com/2015/09/lavrov-us-knows-isis-positions-refu...
Baaaaaaah all you can be:
Which ones do we shoot, sir - they all look alike! Do we shoot the ones carrying our armaments and driving our vehicles, or do we shoot the other guys?
Last thing Europe needs is 10 million extra refugees from Turkey on top of all the other ME countries flooding in. It seems appropriate to take whatever so called leaders like Obama and Cameron say and believe the opposite.
There is a great Russian video (with Eng subs) with explanations about why the ruble is falling.
And you can also see from the video how Russians are now coming together and cheering each other up. Moreover, preliminary results of local elections (which took place yesterday all over Russia) are showing that despite the crisis no liberal party, no pro-Western party has made it through, not even in the smallest municipalities in Siberia:-) Days of liberals in Russia are over, as is Russia's "romance with the West."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rwbqhy37umc
I suppose Russians still have a national identity. The EU and most European governments are trying to destroy national identity and patriotism.