Turkey’s central bank informed local lenders that it would end FX swap auctions as of July 25, BloombergHT reported on July 24.
Data from the authority also confirmed that it had not registered any swap transactions with local banks on July 25 while the stock stood at only $121mn.
Soon the stock will be zeroed upon the maturity of the remaining sum if no new transactions areregistered.
In 2018, following the currency crisis, Turkey’s central bank launched derivative transactions to finance its interventions in the currency market.
Since the local elections held on March 31, the authority has been aggressively cutting the volume of its derivatives stock while building up its reserves thanks to portfolio inflows along with declines in FX deposits and increases in FX loans at local banks.
At its Novemer 2023 peak, the central bank’s open swap stock with local banks reached $64bn. The figure declined from $58bn at end-March to $121mn as of July 25.
Reverse swaps with local banks
Additionally, the central bank has informed local lenders that it will introduce reverse swap auctions (at spot, banks will deposit lira at the central bank in exchange for FX and gold) as a new sterilisation tool, BloombergHT reported on July 23.
The central bank stopped providing central bank money to the system via swaps (at spot, banks deposit FX at the central bank in exchange for lira, note the $121mn figure above).
However, the system is still flooded with lira liquidity. The central bank buys everything that comes from portfolio inflows. Additionally, local banks sell their excess FX, which comes from closing swaps, to the central bank.
Moreover, the central bank is paying interest to the government-instigated “KKM” accounts that are protected from exchange rate losses.
Swaps with foreign central banks
In another move to rebuild the quality of its reserves, the central bank said on July 24 that it has terminated the $5bn deposit made by the Saudi Fund for Development in 2023.
Its external liabilities have recently improved by approximately $7bn through the reduction of deposit balances, it also noted.
As a result, it is estimated that the central bank’s open swap stock with foreign counterparts has fallen to $16bn from $23bn.
Turkish central bank's swap and deposit agreements | ||||||||
Total | ||||||||
(mn) | Maturity | |||||||
Nov-22 | Central bank | $5,000 | Saudi Arabia | swap | deposit | CANCELLED | Jul 2024 | |
Jan-22 | Central bank | €1,000 | Azerbaijan | TCMB #swap anlaşmaları ve kullanımları: data-sheets-value="{"1":2,"2":"swap"}">swap |
6-month | deposit | Sofaz | oil fund |
Jan-22 | Central bank | $4,700 | UAE | swap | 3-year | 18bn dirhem | ||
Aug-21 | Central bank | $6,370 | IMF | SDR | allocation | |||
Aug-21 | Central bank | $2,000 | Korea | swap | 3-year | Korean won | ||
Jun-21 | Central bank | $3,600 | China | swap | CYN23bn | |||
Jan-21 | Central bank | $1,400 | China | swap | Chinese | yuan | ||
May-20 | Central bank | $10,000 | Qatar | swap | Qatari rial | Qatari riyal | ||
Nov-19 | Central bank | $2,000 | Qatar | swap | Qatari Rial | |||
Jun-19 | Central bank | $1,000 | China | swap | Chinese yuan | |||
Aug-18 | Central bank | $3,000 | Qatar | swap | Qatari rial |
Table: Turkish central bank’s swap and deposit agreements with foreign counterparts. The entire sums are not used.
Building up reserves
From end-March, the central bank’s net FX position excluding swaps improved by $89bn from minus $74bn to a positive $15bn as of July 19.
Since July 19, the improvement has continued. As things stand, it can be said that the central bank’s reserve quality is not negative anymore.
Turkish central bank's net FX position | |||||||||
A.1_FOREIGN ASSETS (Thousand TRY) | P.1_TOTAL FOREIGN LIABILITIES (Thousand TRY) | Net (A.1-P.1) | USD/TRY Buying | Net USDmn | 2. Aggregate short and long positions in forwards and futures in foreign currencies | 3. Other (specify) | Net (minus) swaps | Cumulative change (USD bn) | |
Mar 29, 2024 | 4,057,007,074 | 3,834,312,295 | 222,694,779 | 32.26 | 6,903 | -76,653 | -4,338 | -74,088 | |
Apr 30, 2024 | 4,107,363,595 | 3,743,279,647 | 364,083,948 | 32.34 | 11,258 | -57,559 | -5,986 | -52,287 | 22 |
May 17, 2024 | 4,540,619,192 | 3,721,838,317 | 818,780,875 | 32.16 | 25,460 | -43,568 | -5,082 | -23,190 | 51 |
May 24, 2024 | 4,639,784,615 | 3,574,706,968 | 1,065,077,647 | 32.14 | 33,139 | -40,745 | -4,729 | -12,335 | 62 |
May 30, 2024 | 4,675,489,675 | 3,476,230,575 | 1,199,259,100 | 32.25 | 37,188 | -39,291 | -4,680 | -6,783 | 67 |
Jun 28, 2024 | 4,762,091,401 | 3,700,003,784 | 1,062,087,617 | 32.83 | 32,355 | -24,565 | -3,264 | 4,526 | 79 |
Jul 19, 2024 | 5,152,701,184 | 3,816,209,032 | 1,336,492,152 | 33.00 | 40,495 | -23,276 | -1,966 | 15,253 | 89 |
Table: Turkish central bank’s net FX position.
Across the same period, Turkey attracted $25bn via carry trade flows. It is thought that the central bank has acquired the entire sum.
Carry Trade Flows to Turkey (estimate) | ||||||||
million USD | Turkish Banks Off-Balance Sheet FX Position | Turkish Central Bank's Total Swap Stock with Local Banks | Swaps Converted to Deposits |
Lira-settled FX Frowards | Turkish Central Bank's Net FX Derivatives Stock with Local Banks | Turkish Banks' Swap Stock with Foreign Counterparts (estimate) | Carry Trade Flows (estimate) | Cumulative Flow |
Mar 29, 2024 | 55,781 | 57,898 | 433 | 4,279 | 61,744 | -5,963 | ||
Apr 5, 2024 | 53,366 | 53,569 | 433 | 4,269 | 57,405 | -4,039 | 1,924 | 1,924 |
Apr 12, 2024 | 53,712 | 52,336 | 433 | 4,269 | 56,172 | -2,460 | 1,579 | 3,503 |
Apr 19, 2024 | 47,020 | 44,495 | 413 | 3,902 | 47,984 | -964 | 1,497 | 5,000 |
Apr 26, 2024 | 43,446 | 39,586 | 363 | 3,384 | 42,607 | 839 | 1,803 | 6,803 |
May 3, 2024 | 43,912 | 36,813 | 243 | 2,615 | 39,185 | 4,727 | 3,888 | 10,690 |
May 10, 2024 | 43,112 | 31,398 | 243 | 2,142 | 33,297 | 9,815 | 5,088 | 15,778 |
May 17, 2024 | 39,292 | 25,355 | 243 | 1,939 | 27,051 | 12,241 | 2,426 | 18,204 |
May 24, 2024 | 36,533 | 22,264 | 243 | 1,746 | 23,767 | 12,766 | 525 | 18,729 |
May 31, 2024 | 35,224 | 20,811 | 243 | 592 | 21,160 | 14,064 | 1,298 | 20,027 |
Jun 7, 2024 | 33,213 | 18,300 | 163 | 349 | 18,486 | 14,727 | 664 | 20,690 |
Jun 14, 2024 | 27,881 | 12,496 | 103 | 141 | 12,534 | 15,347 | 619 | 21,310 |
Jun 21, 2024 | 25,589 | 9,093 | 40 | 5 | 9,058 | 16,531 | 1,185 | 22,495 |
Jun 28, 2024 | 21,134 | 4,719 | 0 | 0 | 4,719 | 16,415 | -116 | 22,378 |
Jul 5, 2024 | 20,798 | 2,322 | 0 | 0 | 2,322 | 18,476 | 2,061 | 24,439 |
Jul 12, 2024 | 20,813 | 2,351 | 0 | 0 | 2,351 | 18,462 | -14 | 24,425 |
Jul 19, 2024 | 20,842 | 2,051 | 0 | 0 | 2,051 | 18,791 | 329 | 24,754 |
Table: Carry trade flows to Turkey.
In the same period, foreigners bought $9.7bn worth of domestic government paper and sold a net $1.3bn worth of equities. It is thought that the central bank has also acquired the net sum of about $8bn.
Weekly net flows into Turkey's lira paper urkey (estimate) | |||||
million USD | Government papers | Cumulative since end-March | Stocks | Total cumulative | |
Mar 22, 2024 | -104 | 429 | |||
Mar 29, 2024 | 112 | 267 | |||
Apr 5, 2024 | 86 | 86 | 363 | 363 | 449 |
Apr 12, 2024 | 38 | 125 | 160 | 523 | 647 |
Apr 19, 2024 | 115 | 240 | -143 | 380 | 619 |
Apr 26, 2024 | 604 | 843 | -155 | 225 | 1,068 |
May 3, 2024 | 761 | 1,604 | 311 | 536 | 2,140 |
May 10, 2024 | 2,833 | 4,437 | 85 | 620 | 5,057 |
May 17, 2024 | 1,339 | 5,776 | -233 | 388 | 6,163 |
May 24, 2024 | 1,570 | 7,346 | -28 | 360 | 7,706 |
May 31, 2024 | 94 | 7,440 | -529 | -169 | 7,271 |
Jun 7, 2024 | 541 | 7,981 | -543 | -712 | 7,269 |
Jun 14, 2024 | 792 | 8,773 | -439 | -1,151 | 7,622 |
Jun 21, 2024 | 34 | 8,807 | -158 | -1,309 | 7,498 |
Jun 28, 2024 | -679 | 8,128 | -228 | -1,537 | 6,591 |
Jul 5, 2024 | 1,418 | 9,546 | 156 | -1,381 | 8,165 |
Jul 12, 2024 | 895 | 10,441 | -58 | -1,438 | 9,003 |
Jul 19, 2024 | -700 | 9,741 | 124 | -1,314 | 8,427 |
Table: Net flows into Turkey’s domestic government paper and equities.
In the same period, local lenders’ swap stock with the central bank declined by $56bn from $58bn at end-March to $2bn as of July 19. (See the carry trade table above). It is thought that the central bank has acquired the entire sum from local banks.
When $25bn from carry trade, $8bn from lira paper and $56bn from swaps are totalled up, it equals the $89bn improvement in the central bank’s net position.
The main drivers that allowed local banks to close their swaps with the central bank were the increase in FX loans (in-balance sheet FX assets up) along with the decline in FX deposits (in-balance sheet FX liabilities down).
As a result, the banks do not need to hold off-balance sheet FX assets.
FX loans increased by $20bn from $135bn at end-March to $155bn as of July 19, while FX deposits declined by $20bn from $210bn at end-March to $191bn as of July 19.