JPMorgan ups Turkey inflation, growth forecasts after rates decision

People shop at a fresh market in Istanbul

LONDON (Reuters) – Wall Street bank JPMorgan revised both its growth and inflation outlooks for Turkey upwards after the central bank delivered a smaller-than-expected interest rate hike on Thursday.

JPMorgan forecast that full-year economic growth would stand at 4% by year-end rather than the previously expected 3.2%. Meanwhile, inflationary pressures have intensified in July due to ongoing lira depreciation and tax hikes and wage hikes, JPMorgan analyst Fatih Akcelik said in a note to clients, adding he now expected year-end inflation to stand at 57% rather than 50%.

Inflation was expected to peak at 64% in May 2024 due to unfavourable base effects in natural gas prices and pre-election stimulus, Akcelik added.

“We maintain our year-end policy rate forecast at 30%, and we still expect a 250 bps (basis point) hike at each meeting by the end of the year.”

Turkey’s central bank hiked its policy rate by 250 bps to 17.5% on Thursday, continuing to reverse President Tayyip Erdogan’s low-rates policy as it promised more tightening and said it would support it with additional measures.

(Reporting by Karin Strohecker, editing by Libby George)

Ad: Save every day with Amazon Deals: Check out today's daily deals on Amazon.

Related posts

Spirit Christmas expands New Jersey holiday pop-ups with new 2025 locations including Toms River

Flight attendant age discrimination suit moves forward in New Jersey court against United Airlines

Judge tosses inmate’s civil rights suit against Gov. Murphy over confinement claims