Turkish lira undershooting fair value: global banking group

Reuters  |  WASHINGTON 

(Reuters) - The Turkish lira is significantly below fair value at the moment and should strengthen over the next one to two years as Turkey's slows and exports gain strength, improving the country's outlook, economists for the Institute of said on Wednesday.

Speaking on a about market turbulence in and other emerging markets, IIF said that fair value for the Turkish lira, based on macroeconomic fundamentals, "is somewhere around 5 to 5.50" to the dollar.

The lira was trading around 6.05 to the dollar on Wednesday after hitting a low of 7.24 on Monday amid market concerns about a high current account deficit, Recep Tayyip Erdogan's opposition to higher interest rates and a widening trade dispute with the

"On the fundamentals, the underlying forces for the Turkish lira are quite positive," Brooks said. "We are working on an analysis that shows that the current account is on a significantly improving track, not just because the is contracting, but also because the currency is so cheap that exports will get a meaningful boost in terms of export volumes, so I expect on a one-to-two year horizon, for the Turkish lira to be significantly stronger."

While much of Turkey's currency drop is due to "idiosyncratic" factors in Turkey, such as a runup in credit that has fueled unusually strong growth, Brooks said there was potential for contagion in the form of capital outflows from some other emerging markets, including Argentina, South Africa, Indonesia, and

"We think those capital flows are quite indicative of contagion potential," he said, adding that because the U.S. economic cycle is quite old, more funds have flowed into emerging markets that are "further afield" in search of higher returns.

The IIF, which represents financial institutions from around the world, had turned cautious on emerging markets earlier this year, when Argentina's peso began experiencing weakness that later led to an credit line for the country.

(Reporting by in Washington; Editing by and Matthew Lewis)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, August 15 2018. 21:06 IST