Turkish Central Bank

Morgan Stanley expects another 250bps cut this month

The Turkish Central Bank is on track to deliver another 250 basis points rate cut when its Monetary Policy Committee meets this month, according to Morgan Stanley.

The Central Bank started the easing cycle in December by lowering its policy rate from 50 percent to 47.5 percent in a move that marked the first cut in nearly two years.

Central Bank once again keeps interest rate on hold at 50 pct

As widely expected, the Turkish Central Bank has kept the key interest rate, the one-week repo auction rate, on hold for an eighth straight month at 50 percent.

While inflation expectations and price behavior tend to improve, they continue to pose risks to the disinflation process, the bank said in a statement released after the Monetary Policy Committee meeting on Nov. 21.

Analysts expect interest rate cut by the end of this year

Analysts at some international banks are now expecting the Turkish Central Bank to deliver a rate cut in November after the bank altered its guidance.

In a statement accompanying its rate decision, the bank said on Sept. 19 that "monetary policy tools will be used effectively in case a significant and persistent deterioration in inflation is foreseen."

Decline in inflation likely to spur share of lira deposits: Central Bank

Declines in inflation over the next months will further boost the rise in the share of Turkish Lira deposits in total, according to a post on the Turkish Central Bank's blog.

The share of lira deposits in total deposits grew from 48.4 percent to 51.8 percent in July-August, the blog post by researchers and economists working at the bank stated.

Economic policies to bring foreign investments back to Türkiye: Rogers

Türkiye has changed its economic policies, garnering attention from investors worldwide, said U.S. investor and financial expert Jim Rogers, adding that foreign investors will "come back but it takes a while."

"If Türkiye can show us that they are doing the right thing now, investors will come back," Rogers told Anadolu Agency.

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