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Turkish Inflation Climbs to Highest Since 2002 Amid Lira Woes

Turkish Inflation Climbs to Highest Since 2002 Amid Lira Woes

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Turkish inflation accelerated for a seventh month in December, driven to a 19-year high by a slumping lira and lower borrowing costs.

Annual consumer inflation rate rose to 36.08% last month, the highest since September 2002 and up sharply from 21.31% in November. The figure was much higher than the 27.36% median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of 19 analysts. 

Key Insights

  • Monthly inflation was 13.58%, compared with the median estimate of 8.5% in a separate survey
  • Producer prices rose 19.08% through the month, bringing annual inflation to 79.89%
  • The lira weakened after the report and was trading 3.7% lower at 13.8115 per dollar at 10:04 a.m. in Istanbul

Background

  • The acceleration takes Turkey’s benchmark interest rate adjusted for inflation to negative 22.08%, the lowest real yield among emerging markets
  • Retail price inflation in Istanbul, Turkey’s business capital, climbed to 34.18% last month from 24.05% in November
  • The central bank will hold its next rate-setting meeting on Jan. 20
  • Turkey’s decision to slash five percentage points off the central bank’s benchmark rate since September has led to a slump in the lira, which has depreciated around 44% against the dollar last year, the worst among all major currencies tracked by Bloomberg

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.