Showing posts with label currency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label currency. Show all posts

Monday, 13 August 2018

Turkish Lira Crashes Through 7 As Erdogan Threatens To Unleash "Plan B Or C..."


Burn It Down, Rip It Apart: Turks Destroy US Dollars Amid Trump Sanctions

12 August, 2018

An anti-dollar flash mob has been gaining traction in Turkey following the decline of the local currency, caused by Washington’s decision to hit the country with massive import tariffs. US-Turkey tensions continue to escalate over Ankara’s detention of an American pastor and its plans to acquire Russian air defense systems.



Videos posted online show Turks setting US banknotes on fire, sneezing into them and tearing them apart.

In this video, a man is seen burning a one hundred dollar bill with a cigar lighter.

In another clip, several middle-aged men make a bonfire out of US dollar bills.



A Turkish official has joined the flash mob.


Hollanda’yı portakal sıkarak, Dolar’ın yükselişini Dolar yakarak protesto eden zihniyet ile ‘Onların doları varsa bizim Allah’ımız var.’ diyenlere hatırlatma yapalım. Yaktığınız doların üzerinde ‘İn God We Trust’ yani ‘Allah’a Güveniyoruz’ yazıyor.



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The local media reported that crowds of people came together, kissing Turkish lira banknotes and ripping US dollars apart.


These protests come after Donald Trump's decision to double import tariffs on Turkish steel and aluminum caused a currency crisis in Turkey, with the lira collapsing to an all-time low against the dollar. The move has sparked a backlash from Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who called on Turkish people to exchange dollars and gold for the lira.


Relations between Washington and Ankara have been strained in recent years over Turkey's refusal to release American pastor Andrew Brunson, who was arrested in 2016 after a failed coup and accused of terrorism and espionage. In late July, he was released from prison and placed under house arrest, while facing the same terrorism charges.

Moreover, the White House has objected to Turkey's plan to acquire the Russian-made S-400 air defense system. Last month, the US temporary halted transfers of F-35 fighter jets to Turkey, taking a month and a half to assess how canceling the delivery of the planes would impact relations with Ankara, its plans to purchase S-400 air defense systems and the US industrial base in the event that Ankara withdraws from the international F-35 program.


Ankara has blasted US efforts to disrupt the delivery of F-35s, reminding Washington that Turkey has already paid Lockheed Martin for part of its order for 100 F-35s. Turkish officials told the US that the country has a right to self-defense and explained that it would buy NATO air defense systems if Ankara were to receive an appropriate offer.

Turkish Lira Crashes Through 7 As Erdogan Threatens To Unleash "Plan B Or C..."

12 August, 2018
Following emergency bank meetings and numerous pleas by Erdogan for Turks not to "pull FX out of their banks," blaming the country's current economic crisis on America, the Lira has opened massively weaker - crashing below 7.00 per dollar for the first time ever...
That is the second day in a row that the lira has crashed over 75 handles!!!
As The FT reports, Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused other countries on Sunday of mounting an “operation” to bring down the Turkish economy...
What is the cause of this storm?” he asked a gathering of ruling party officials in the Black Sea city of Trabzon. “There is no economic reason . . . It’s an operation against Turkey.”

But gave no indication he would meet investors’ demands for an emergency plan to prop up the plunging lira.



"I’m calling out to industrialists, do not attack banks to buy FX," said Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in a speech in Trabzon.
"It is industrialists’ duty too to keep this nation on its feet. Otherwise we will set into motion our plan B and C," he added.


Sounds very scary - Plan B and C... we can guess that the 'B' stands for 'Block' capital outflows and 'C' stands for confiscation of gold and dollars.
Reuters reports a low level of 7.22 - all of which implies the Turkish banking system is done.


As Goldman Sachs warned,  further lira depreciation to 7.1 would erode all of Turkey's banks' excess capital.


Within the current backdrop, we view banks as being vulnerable to Turkish Lira depreciation given that it impacts:
(1) capital levels due to a meaningful portion of FC assets, which increase RWAs in local currency terms on Turkish Lira depreciation,
(2) asset quality and cost of risk, as Turkish Lira volatility can put stress on borrowers’ ability to repay as well as underlying collateral values. Moreover, Lira depreciation leads to higher provisioning requirements for FC NPLs, though banks are hedging this risk and can offset the impact through trading income.

The CET 1 ratio for Turkish banks under our coverage is around 13.2% on average on a bank-only basis and 12.2% on a consolidated basis, vs. 8%-9% fully-phased in requirement. We calculate that every 10% Lira depreciation impacts bank’s capital by c.50bp on average. Indeed, 14% Lira depreciation in 2Q18 took away around 80bp off bank’s CET 1 ratios. We estimate that the c.12% depreciation of the Turkish lira since June 30, 2018 would further reduce capital by c.60bp on average (pre internal capital generation and any management action).


We view Yapi Kredi as the weakest positioned on capital levels, with 2Q18 consolidated CET 1 of 10.7% vs. 8.5% fully phased-in minimum requirement. While the recent rights issue added 140bp to capital levels, Lira depreciation offset it by around 80bp.


We calculate that quarter to date 3Q18 Lira depreciation would offset the remaining c.60bp capital uplift from the rights issue, though this may be mitigated through internal capital generation and a potential transition to an IRB-based approach. As a result, incremental Lira depreciation could increase capital concerns for banks, especially for ones with lower capital levels.
We calculate that further Lira depreciation to around 7.1 vs. USD on average could largely erode banks’ excess capital



*  *  *
Looks like we were off by 2 days...
After Albayrak ends, there is another speech by Erdogan. TRY should be at 7 by then
Turks have begun symbolically burning (fake) dollars as Erdogan appeals to his fervent religious support to de-dollarize...
In Furious Rant Erdogan Lashes Out At Trump: "We See The Game You're Playing, We Dare You"

12 August, 2018

In the wake of the U.S. doubling tariffs on Turkish steel and aluminum on Friday which sent the Turkish lira and capital markets into free fall, Erdogan wrote a Friday New York Times op-ed cataloging his grievances and threatening to walk away from the decades-old alliance. "Failure to reverse this trend of unilateralism and disrespect will require us to start looking for new friends and allies," he wrote. Meanwhile, while announcing the new sanctions aimed at Turkey, Trump tweeted his "analysis" of the situation: "Our relations with Turkey are not good at this time!"

The escalating war of words continued on Saturday, when speaking at a rally in the Black Sea town of Unye, Erdogan said that "it is wrong to dare bring Turkey to its knees through threats over a pastor," and blasted "shame on you, shame on you. You are exchanging your strategic partner in NATO for a priest." At the same time, Ibrahim Kalin, Erdogan’s spokesman, said that the U.S. is "facing the risk of completely losing Turkey."
And if anyone was hoping that Erdogan's temper would have cooled one day later with just hours left before FX markets reopen, they were sorely disappointed on Sunday when in his latest public address in the town of Trabzon, Erdogan doubled down on his belligerent rhetoric against the US once again, via Bloomberg:
  • ERDOGAN: WE SEE THE GAME YOU'RE PLAYING; WE DARE YOU
  • ERDOGAN: THEY'RE TRYING W/ MONEY WHAT THEY COULDN'T DO IN COUP
Here one assumes that by "they" Erdogan was referring to the US, even though the Turkish's president official line all along was that the culprit behind the "failed coup" was the exiled cleric Fethulah Gullen who has been accused by Erodgan of being behind the country's imaginary "shadow state" for years, and which gave Erdogan a green light to crackdown on any potential opponents, leading to an unprecedented purge of people in public positions, with tens of thousands of government workers either ending up in prison or unemployed.
Erdogan then continued by calling for all Turks to convert their foreign currency holdings, i.e. mostly dollars, to liras, and warning that "economic attacks will only increase Turkey's unity."
Among the other notable highlights, Erdogan said that "we will say bye-bye to those who are ready to give up their strategic partnership for their relations with terror organizations" and that Turkey can "respond to those who started a trade war against the entire world and included our country in it by gravitating towards new co-operations, new alliances" i.e. China and Russia (which earlier today said it was considering dropping the US dollar altogether in oil trade), and warned that "it is foolish to think that Turkey can be thrown off by FX" although with inflation set to explode as the currency collapses, the local population may have a different view of this. 

Finally, anyone wondering which way the Lira will open later today, Erdogan did his best to make the ongoing collapse accelerate, stating that "we know very well that those who say we should make an agreement with the IMF are saying we should give up on political independence", thus eliminating the possibility of an IMF bailout which together with capital controls were the only two options Turkey had left to arrest the lira's plunge.

As for higher interest rates, a critical requirement to at least slow down the country's economic descent, Erdogan had some words as well: "
  • "They are trying to do with money what they couldn’t with provocations and the coup. This is clearly called an economic war"
  • "Interest rates are tools of exploitation that make the rich richer and the poor poorer. As long as I’m alive, we will not fall into the interest-rate trap"
And the punchline:
  • ERDOGAN SAYS READY TO RESPOND W NEW FINANCIAL TOOLS VS DOLLAR
It was not clear what those tools would be, but they certainly would not be welcome by the market. After all, as Bloomberg reported overnight, investors believe that Turkey’s central bank will have to flout Erdogan’s desires and announce a significant increase to its benchmark 17.75 percent benchmark rate just to stop the currency’s free-fall as it touches levels that had been unimaginable even a month ago.
Seems like a complete crash, so they need to act now,” said Morten Lund, a strategist at Nordea Bank AB in Copenhagen. “The lira will keep falling if they don’t hike rates.”
And after Erdogan's latest rant - which clearly crushed any speculation of either more rate hikes or an IMF bail out - foreign investors may have no choice but to pull their capital out of Turkey, transforming what was already an acute currency crisis into a full blown financial panic.
Which leaves capital controls as Erdogan's last option. The problem, as we reported yesterday, is that while the Turkish crisis was relatively contained in the context of emerging markets due to the nation's unique capital account funding needs...

... if there was one thing that could force the Turkish collapse to escalate and result in global contagion, it is the fear of capital controls. This is how Robert Marchini, a political strategist at Zenith Asset Management laid out to Bloomberg how he see the "worst case scenario" for Turkey:
Regarding Turkey as a potential 'Black Swan'-level event, I'm skeptical the collapse of the currency per se would be enough of an incident. The market has known for a while Erdogan was leading the country in an economically reckless direction. The real question was when it all would blow up (although I don't think anyone thought it would go down this quickly.) More specifically, I think that the [EU] banks' exposures to both external debt and local operations, while significant, are not at a crisis level.
Where the real risk lies, and one that I think has not been adequately considered, is the markets' reaction to [potential] capital controls. Should Erdogan impose capital controls, in addition to banks' writedowns on [now-toxic] Turkish assets, investors' reaction is likely to be panic and to yank capital out of other EMs before either A. That EM's currency falls further and/or B. That EM's government gets the same idea as Turkey.
This becomes somewhat of a self-fulfilling prophecy, and in my opinion is where the real possibility for contagion lies.
In other words, having done nothing while the Turkish financial crisis spiraled out of control first slowly and then blazing fast, Erdogan now finds himself facing a most unpleasant dilemma: damned if he does, and damned if he doesn't.



Thursday, 13 August 2015

China devalues yuan a second time

More comment to come. Listen to Gerald Celente below

Kiwi under pressure after second yuan devaluation

China's second currency devaluation in two days has rattled markets across the region and put pressure on the New Zealand dollar.

The headquarters of the People's Bank of China (PBOC) in Beijing.
The People's Bank of China devalued the currency for a second day in a row.   Photo: AFP

13 August, 2015

The People's Bank of China yesterday devalued the currency against the US dollar by 1.6 percent on after cutting its value by 1.9 percent the day before.
The yuan fell another 1 percent yesterday, marking the biggest two-day lowering of its rate against the dollar in more than two decades.

The New Zealand dollar touched six-year lows, dropping nearly half a cent against its American counterpart to US64.7 cents at one stage yesterday before rebounding. At 5.30am today it was trading at US66.25 cents.

Foreign exchange adviser Derek Rankin told Morning Report the foreign exchange market had been volatile, with minute-by-minute changes, but the New Zealand dollar was expected to continue to fall overall.

"The danger is that other currencies are going to be affected by this as well, and that's why they call it currency wars, because everyone's trying to have a weak currency to try and help their exporters.

"And, of course, not every one can have a weak currency," he said.

China's central bank has revised the way it calculates its guidance rate to better reflect market forces. The new rate is meant to boost exports and help boost China's flagging economy, and further devaluations are considered likely.

Analysts say the devaluation is bad news for New Zealand exporters, particularly for commodities like dairy products which are priced in US dollars and are now more expensive to Chinese consumer.

The move sent fresh shockwaves through Asian stock markets, which fell more than 1 percent.

Concerns about China's stalling growth have also been compounded by fresh data on industrial production, retail sales and fixed-asset investment, all of which came in below market expectations.

Figures released at the weekend showed Chinese exports fell more than 8 percent in July, adding to concerns the world's second largest economy is heading for a slowdown.

Rate more market-based

Yesterday, China's central bank fixed the "official midpoint" for the yuan down 1.6 percent to 6.3306 against the dollar. The midpoint is a guiding rate, from which trade can rise or fall 2 percent during the day.

Until Tuesday, that rate had been determined solely by the People's Bank of China (PBOC) itself.

But the rate will now be based on overnight global market developments and how the currency finished the previous trading day.

The devaluation could mean Chinese exporters, in particular textile and car companies, may become more competitive, as Chinese consumer goods will be cheaper for foreign retailers. But exporters to China are likely will find it harder to sell their goods.

China's currency devaluation could spark 'tidal wave of deflation'


Chinese Yuan
12 August, 2015


Make no mistake, this is the start of something big, something ugly.” City economist Albert Edwards rarely minces his words, but his reaction to China’s devaluation, which sent shockwaves through global markets, underlined how powerfully Beijing’s move may be felt thousands of miles way.

Edwards, of the bank Société Générale, argues that as well as creating a challenge for China’s Asian rivals, by making its exports more competitive, a cheaper yuan will send “a tidal wave of deflation” breaking over the world economy.

Central banks in the US and the UK have primed investors for interest rate rises, with the Bank of England Mark Carney pointing to the turn of the year for a move, and Janet Yellen, at the Federal Reserve, signalling that a tightening could start as soon as September.

Edwards argues that instead of pushing up rates, central banks in the west should be preparing themselves to ward off a deflationary slump.

In the period running up to the financial crisis of 2008, which became known as the “Great Moderation”, inflation in the west was kept under control by the influx of cheap commodities and consumer goods from China and other low-wage economies.

Economies including the UK and the US were able to expand more rapidly than they otherwise might have done, without generating a surge in inflation.
But today, with inflation already close to zero – indeed at zero in the UK – China’s decision to devalue could bring a fresh wave of price weakness to the west.



Cheap goods are great news when economic demand is relatively strong; but economists fret about falling prices because entrenched deflation can prompt businesses and consumers to postpone spending – hoping prices have farther to fall – and blunt policymakers’ standard tool of interest rate cuts.

Erik Britton, of City consultancy Fathom, said: “We’re all going to feel it: we’ll feel it through commodities; we’ll feel it through manufactured goods exports, not just from China but from everywhere that has to compete with it; and we’ll feel it through wages.”

At the very least, analysts believe China’s move could persuade monetary policymakers to stay their hand. “If there’s deflation in the system, is the Fed going to be tightening? The answer is, no,” said Simon Derrick, of BNY Mellon.

Britton believes Carney’s strong hints that a rate rise is on the way could also prove premature. “In the UK, you’re not going to see tightening any time soon.”
Where economic demand is already fragile – in the eurozone, for example – the effects of deflation are likely to be felt more strongly.

Fathom believes China could be willing to let the yuan depreciate by as much as 25% over the next five years – “stone by stone, step by step” – in an attempt to restore the export-led growth that was such a winning formula in the decade running up to the global financial crisis.

How much more Beijing is willing to go is likely to depend partly on its motivations. There are at least three theories.

The first, and most benign, is that the People’s Bank of China is keen to show the yuan is a truly free-floating currency, in order to win inclusion in the basket used by the International Monetary Fund to determine the value of member-countries’ Special Drawing Rights – in effect the IMF’s internal currency.

A decision about composition of the SDR is expected in September next year. Putting the IMF’s imprimatur on the yuan in this way could start to open the way for its use as a global reserve currency, and this latest move could be seen as a way of winning the approval of the Washington-based lender.

But a jarring move could infuriate the Americans, who have the whip-hand at the IMF, so if this is the primary motivation, it might suggest Beijing will proceed with caution.

Second, and slightly less reassuring, is the idea that China is trying to buy itself a bit of insurance against a coming Fed rate rise.

Pegging the Chinese currency against the dollar has become increasingly costly, with the dollar up as much as 21% against other global currencies since spring of last year, and although China’s foreign exchange reserves remain vast, the central bank has been forced to dip into them to support the currency.

Simon Evenett, a trade expert at the University of St Gallen in Switzerland, believes China is trying to protect itself against the period of financial instability that can follow monetary tightening, by pre-emptively weakening the link between the yuan and the greenback.

Plenty of studies have shown that rising interest rates in Washington have precipitated crises in emerging markets, whose knock-on effects can’t be reliably predicted. Preservation of options may provide the best account for Tuesday’s steps by the People’s Bank of China,” said Evenett.

But third, and perhaps most alarming, is the argument that China has resorted to devaluing its currency in a desperate attempt to stabilise economic growth, as other levers have failed.

Chinese policymakers have been engaged in a gargantuan effort to switch their export-dependent economy, reliant on volatile international demand, to another engine: consumer spending at home.

At the same time, they are battling to bring more competition and free market approaches to stodgy state industries; and to tackle the legacy of an unsustainable borrowing binge, including bubbles in the property and stock markets.

These would be a formidable set of challenges for any political leaders, and while the state of the Chinese economy is hard to assess, a number of warning signs have been flashing, including a share price plunge on a scale reminiscent of the US’s 1929 Wall Street crash and most recently, an 8.3% drop in exports in July.

Official figures show GDP growth in line with Beijing’s 7% target; but Fathom’s analysts, who study other measures, such as electricity usage and freight volumes, say it appears to be closer to 4%. Britton describes the depreciation as “China, doubling-down on its bet,” and warned: “If we are right about the hardness of the landing they’re facing, you ain’t seen nothing yet.”

Adam Posen, of the Peterson Institute of International Economics in Washington, says China’s motivation may only become clear over time, but markets will be asking themselves “is depreciation a side-effect of liberalisation or is liberalisation cover for devaluation?”

But whatever the reasons behind it, Beijing’s economic gear shift will have far-reaching effects. Not everyone is as apocalyptic as Edwards; but he believes the new wave of deflation emanating from China could “overwhelm already struggling corporate profitability and take us back into outright recession”.

As investors realise yet another recession beckons, without any normalisation of either interest rates or fiscal imbalances in this cycle, expect a financial market rout every bit as large as 2008.”


China Can't Save Itself, Downside Risk For Gold 'Very Low' - Gerald Celente