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However, the Ankara stock market also attracts risky investors who are betting that Turkey will get out of trouble. “Many Turkish titles are at extremely low valuation levels,” recalls Cyrrus’s portfolio manager Tomáš Pfeiler. According to him, an example is the move of the Spanish bank BBVA, which increased its stake in the Turkish financial house Garanti in order to take advantage of the extremely cheap valuation of its shares on the Turkish stock exchange.
At the same time, shares are not the only insurance of the Turks against financial shocks in the country. “Bitcoin trading volumes have been growing in recent weeks as the authoritarian government systematically undermines its official currency,” said David Morris, CoinDesk cryptocurrency expert.
The fire in the Turkish currency market, during which the lira fell to a historic low against major world currencies, was triggered this week by the central bank’s fourth rate cut. Investors thus fell into fears of a further acceleration in price growth and another currency shock.
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“If inflation in Turkey continues to rise, which is likely to be due to lower interest rates, the Turkish lira can be expected to continue to weaken,” said XTB analyst Jiří Tyleček.
Both economists and stock marketers have blamed Turkey’s central bank for indirectly fulfilling the views of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has long pursued a low interest rate policy, even in an environment of soaring inflation. The president shook the markets for the first time in March this year, when he appointed Sahapa Kavcioglu’s supporters of the relaxed monetary policy to head the central bank.
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