By Nevzat Devranoglu and Jonathan Spicer
ANKARA (Reuters) – Turkey’s lira was on track for its strongest week on record on Friday, having spiked 44% with the support of billions of dollars of state-backed market interventions and a promise that the government would cover FX losses on certain deposits.
The currency had plunged on Monday to an all-time low of 18.4 to the dollar, after a months-long slide due to unorthodox interest rate cuts and fears of an inflationary spiral.
But late on Monday President Tayyip Erdogan unveiled a scheme in which the Treasury and central bank would reimburse losses on converted lira deposits against foreign currencies, sparking the biggest intraday rally ever.
The anti-dollarisation plan set off four straight days of gains as Turks converted some $900 million worth of hard currencies into lira, according to Finance Minister Nureddin Nebati.
The currency cooled 4% on Friday to 11.85 versus the dollar at 0918 GMT.
The lira got a big boost from what traders and economists called backdoor dollar sales by state banks supported by the central bank.
In the first three days of the week alone, the central bank’s net foreign reserves dropped by $8.5 billion, according to the calculations of three bankers who spoke to Reuters. The drop totalled nearly $18 billion in December, they said.
As of Dec 17, the central bank’s net foreign reserves tumbled to $12.2 billion, from $21.2 billion a week earlier, to levels last hit in May in a reflection of the interventions.
‘USING ALL INSTRUMENTS’
Citing four sources familiar with the operations, including a senior Turkish official, Reuters reported on Thursday that state banks heavily sold dollars earlier this week on the heels of Erdogan’s announcement.
The state banks have not commented on the issue.
The central bank, which was not immediately available for comment, had announced dollar-selling market interventions earlier this month but not this week.
Nebati, discussing interventions on broadcaster NTV on Thursday, said Turkey is “using all the instruments at its disposal in a positive way”.
Hakan Kara, former chief economist at Turkey’s central bank, said on Twitter the bank’s FX sales amount to $17-20 billion this month, including $3 billion on Wednesday alone, though he said it was unclear specifically how they were used.
“State banks provided significant support to the forex balance but it’s not only state banks that are selling dollars,” said a bank trader who requested anonymity.
In 2019-2020, the central bank backed, via swaps, the sale of some $128 billion via state banks to stabilise the lira, depleting Turkey’s foreign reserves and drawing sharp criticism from the political opposition.
Under pressure from Erdogan, the central bank has slashed its policy rates by 500 basis points to 14% since September despite a jump above 21% in inflation. Price rises are set to blow through 30% next year in part due to the lira depreciation.
Reflecting these concerns, Turkish Airlines will raise employee pay by the rate of inflation plus 65% for 2022, according to an agreement with its labour union.
(Reporting by Nevzat Devranoglu and Jonathan Spicer. Editing by Jane Merriman)