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Top EU Bank Supervisor Urges `Bold Action' by Turkey to Fix Lira

Published 08/13/2018, 11:45 AM
Updated 08/13/2018, 12:31 PM
© Bloomberg. Turkish Lira notes

(Bloomberg) -- A central bank that staked its reputation on a stable currency has some tough advice for Turkey: Be bold to stem the lira crisis.

“I’m convinced this downward spiral can be stopped,” said Joachim Wuermeling, an executive board member at Germany’s Bundesbank, which spent decades defending the Deutsche mark before the introduction of the euro. “There are classic instruments Turkey can use. But bold action is missing,” said Wuermeling, who helps supervise the region’s largest banks.

Turkey is in turmoil as a face-off with the U.S. compounds issues built up by years of growth-at-all-costs policies. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has vowed the country won’t use higher interest rates to bolster the currency and choke consumer-price growth. The lira has lost about a quarter of its value against the dollar since the U.S. sanctioned two government ministers, pushing the economy toward a full-blown financial meltdown.

Wuermeling said there’s no need to “over dramatize” the risk that Turkey’s problems will infect the euro area. The Bloomberg Europe Banks and Financial Services Index fell 2.6 percent over the last week, led by lenders with direct exposure to the country through their units there. Wuermeling said supervisors have the option to order banks to hold more capital against Turkey assets.

While Turkey’s central bank raised borrowing costs to 17.75 percent in June from 8 percent in April, it hasn’t tightened since. In a July 24 policy decision, the first since Erdogan won re-election along with sweeping new powers, officials bowed to political pressure to refrain from raising rates again. Erdogan holds some unorthodox economic views, notably that cheaper credit leads to slower inflation.

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“A country that relies on foreign creditors for half of its financing needs, can’t lastingly ignore the rules of global financial markets without suffering damage,” Wuermeling said in an interview in Frankfurt Monday. “Turkey shows the bad that can happen if central bank independence is ignored.”

A 45 percent slide since the start of the year makes the lira the second worst global currency after Venezuela’s bolivar. The depreciation has stoked an inflation rate that breached 15 percent last month, more than triple the official target.

The European Central Bank has the option of crisis-proofing lenders by ordering them to increase reserves for risks, he said. Wuermeling who is a member of the ECB’s supervisory board, said it hasn’t yet seen the need to call an emergency meeting on Turkey.

Click here for an overview of the European banks with the highest exposure to Turkey.

In times of turmoil, supervisors generally ask banks about their liquidity, their exposure to troubled markets and what collateral they hold. The Bundesbank doesn’t see a need to make “supervisory demands” according to Wuermeling. While the country’s banks, which have 20.8 billion euros ($23.7 billion) of risk tied to Turkey, none of the major European lenders with extensive operations in Turkey are German.

On the monetary policy front, the Bundesbanker said he doesn’t see any reason to put in place currency swap lines to maintain Turkey’s access to euros.

“It’s up to Turkish authorities to engage in confidence-fostering measures to ensure creditors don’t withdraw their money,” he said.

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