3 April 2019

Turkey's Bubble Is Bursting

Jesse Colombo

For the past five years, I've been warning about a dangerous credit bubble that has been developing in Turkey's economy. Ultra-low interest rates led to a borrowing binge that created an artificial economic boom that most people thought was a legitimate, sustainable boom. Since the summer of 2018, however, Turkey's central bank was forced to raise interest rates dramatically to stem the sharp decline of the lira. At the time, I cautionedthat those aggressive rate hikes would be the pin that pops Turkey's long-lasting credit bubble, which has proven to be correct, so far.

As the chart below shows, Turkey's credit bubble started in the early-2000s. Private sector credit grew from approximately 15% of GDP in 2003 to 70% of GDP in 2016. Loans to the private sector sextupled from 2010 to 2018.




Turkey's interest rates remained at record low levels from 2009 to 2018, which caused the country's credit bubble to go into overdrive. Turkey's low interest rate era ended in 2018, when the central bank hiked rates from 8% to 24%. Rapid interest rate hikes cause credit bubbles to burst, which then lead to credit busts and recessions.


Sure enough, Turkey has been experiencing a credit bust since August:

Turkey Loans To Private Sector JESSE COLOMBO

To make matters worse, Turkey is officially in a recession after GDP fell 2.4% in the fourth quarter of 2018 and 1.6% in the third quarter:

Turkey GDP Growth JESSE COLOMBO

Though Turkey's government and many commentators are blaming the Trump administration and foreign speculators for the country's economic downturn, the reality is that it was already "baked into the cake" many years ago due to the credit bubble that formed. When a central bank like Turkey's holds interest rates at unusually low levels for a long period of time, dangerous imbalances and distortions form and there is no way of escaping the pain that will result when the markets and economy attempt to normalize again. Unfortunately, Turkey’s credit bust and recession is only in the early stages – a 15 year-old credit bubble doesn’t resolve in just six months.

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