Last week it was the Argentine Peso, now the Turkish lira:
BBC News - Turkish central bank raises lending rate to 12%
A lean toward the 'negative' view of this analysis from yesterday?:
Argentina Rout: Which Emerging Markets Are In The Firing Line? - Forbes
Interesting that India is in that list, I thought they were doing OK with their own space program and all.
BBC News - Turkish central bank raises lending rate to 12%
Turkey's currency had been losing value as investors sold off their lira in favour of foreign currencies amidst ongoing turmoil in emerging markets.
Argentina Rout: Which Emerging Markets Are In The Firing Line? - Forbes
The negative view is that we are now in a period of unavoidable contagion through which all these economies, and then other emerging markets, will enter a spiral. In this spiral, investor concerns trigger outflows from those countries, which exacerbate their existing problems, and so we go on in to crisis. Although BIITS its a lazy and convenient abbreviation which brings together some diverse economies with different challenges, those countries do have some things in common: current account and fiscal deficits – both, in most cases – and doubts about the levels of foreign currency reserves they have relative to their short-term borrowings. As I discussed here, five countries – Turkey, South Africa, Chile, India and Indonesia – only had enough reserves in the second half of last year to cover one year of their short term financing requirements, and Hungary, Brazil and Poland, two. And most of those reserves have declined significantly since then: Turkey’s central bank is believed to have poured as much as one tenth of its foreign currency reserves into the market in support of its currency, without any clear success.
The positive view is that Argentina is a special case (CS comment: Ok, positive view is cancelled then ), and although markets are naturally made nervous by an event like this, they will eventually recognise that Argentina’s problems are not replicated elsewhere (except arguably Venezuela). Confidence in Argentina has fallen because of a host of situations that do not apply in India, or Russia, or Turkey or elsewhere: Argentina faces more international law suits than any other country from companies and sovereign states around the world. It still holds debt in default and has not yet agreed terms for its repayment. It has nationalised companies and scared off foreign investors – see my account of the Repsol situation here - and in doing so it has exacerbated its existing problems with foreign currency reserves relative to outstanding
The positive view is that Argentina is a special case (CS comment: Ok, positive view is cancelled then ), and although markets are naturally made nervous by an event like this, they will eventually recognise that Argentina’s problems are not replicated elsewhere (except arguably Venezuela). Confidence in Argentina has fallen because of a host of situations that do not apply in India, or Russia, or Turkey or elsewhere: Argentina faces more international law suits than any other country from companies and sovereign states around the world. It still holds debt in default and has not yet agreed terms for its repayment. It has nationalised companies and scared off foreign investors – see my account of the Repsol situation here - and in doing so it has exacerbated its existing problems with foreign currency reserves relative to outstanding
Comment