- The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) is expected to maintain the benchmark repo rate at 37% at this week's monetary policy meeting. However, there is a significant divergence in forecasts due to energy price spikes prompted by Middle Eastern geopolitical conflicts.
- Despite 19 out of 23 economists surveyed by Reuters predicting rates to remain unchanged, a minority, including Goldman Sachs (GS:US), strongly calls for a 300 basis point increase to 40% to match the current overnight rate level distorted by tight liquidity.
- With worsening inflation expectations, the market pricing for Turkey's 2026 year-end policy rate has been revised up to 32.75%, highlighting how external shocks are systematically delaying the path to normalization of the country's monetary policy.
Liquidity Management and Overnight Rate Distortion
Though the nominal benchmark rate remains at 37%, the actual borrowing costs in the Turkish money market have been significantly reassessed. In response to recent exchange rate fluctuations and market pressures due to geopolitical tensions, the Turkish Central Bank has silently tightened liquidity, effectively pushing the overnight financing rate to around 40%. This level has risen approximately 300 basis points since the outbreak of the Iran war, creating an inversion between policy and actual market benchmarks. Citi (C:US) reports that this liquidity tightening, while temporarily stabilizing the market, will, in the long run, weaken the transmission efficiency of monetary policy. Raising the benchmark to 40% to align with overnight rates would be a rational choice for the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) to restore pricing benchmark transparency.
Energy Shocks Reshaping Current Account Pricing
As an emerging market economy heavily reliant on energy imports, Turkey is highly sensitive to the pulse-like spike in international crude oil prices. Current New York crude futures maintaining above $90 directly breach the buffer offered by Turkey's domestic fuel tax sliding mechanism. Macroeconomic data shows that Turkey's inflation rate reached as high as 30.87% in March, with imported inflation pressures spreading to core prices. Surveys indicate that economists' expectations for the 2026 year-end inflation rate have been revised from just under 28% last month to 28.1%. The high energy import bills also pressure the current account, and despite the government's three-year roadmap predicting the current account deficit to narrow to 2.3% of GDP this year, persistently high oil prices pose a severe challenge to achieving this fiscal target.
Increasing Discrepancy in Wall Street's Investment Predictions
Ahead of Wednesday's rate decision, Wall Street investment banks presented contrasting policy projections. The mainstream consensus, represented by Citi's baseline scenario, suggests that Turkey's ample foreign reserves currently give the decision-makers the confidence to maintain their stance, thus preventing excessive financing costs from inflicting damage on the real economy. However, Goldman Sachs represents the minority hawkish view among market participants, emphasizing that the persistence of the oil price shock since the last meeting far exceeds expectations, altering the central bank's earlier pause in the tightening cycle. Under the dual pressures of escalating external imbalances and domestic price stickiness, a single 300 basis point rate hike is not just an acknowledgment of actual tightening, but a necessary anchor for inflation expectations.
Systematic Delay in Medium-term Inflation Targets and Long-term Rate Cuts
Earlier this year, Turkey's Central Bank Governor, Fatih Karahan, reiterated the mid-2026 inflation target of 16%, but the forecast range upper limit has been expanded to 21%. However, the latest Reuters poll shows market consensus for year-end inflation is much higher than the central bank's optimistic target. This expectation gap has directly led to a reshaping of the forward rate curve. The survey indicates that market expectations for the 2026 year-end policy rate have been raised to 32.75%, meaning the previous market pricing of a significant rate cut cycle has been substantively slowed or even shelved. Until mid-2027, the policy rate might only slowly come down to 28%. For foreign funds investing in Turkish lira assets, this means preparing for an extended period of high interest and high volatility environment.




