Treasury and monetary authorities in Turkey will maintain elevated borrowing costs until the central bank's next policy session on July 23, according to people familiar with the matter cited by Bloomberg News. Governor Fatih Karahan told investors in London on Wednesday that the bank does not plan to restore weekly repo funding before that meeting.
Those who attended the governor's briefing said Karahan told investors that restarting weekly repo operations ahead of the July gathering would be premature because the bank wants to see fresh inflation data first. The attendees requested anonymity when relaying the comments. The central bank did not provide an official comment on the reports.
Earlier this month the Monetary Policy Committee left the benchmark one-week repo rate unchanged at 37%. The central bank had ceased funding at that rate after February 28 and switched to a costlier overnight lending rate of 40%. That operational change tightened domestic liquidity conditions following the US- and Israeli-led war in Iran.
Karahan's statement is expected to temper market hopes that policymakers were ready to restart an easing cycle in the near term. Still, some market participants continue to expect that the central bank could lower overnight lending rates as soon as next month.
Context and operational stance
The bank's current posture rests on maintaining a high headline policy stance while pausing weekly repo funding until after the July 23 meeting. Officials have cited the need to evaluate incoming inflation readings before adjusting the operational framework or signaling a return to weekly repos.
Market implications
By indicating no immediate resumption of weekly repo funding, the central bank dampens short-term expectations for an imminent easing of rates. The use of the 40% overnight facility in place of one-week repo funding has already had a tightening effect on liquidity conditions.
Note on sourcing
The reporting in this article is based on comments attributed to people familiar with the matter and to attendees at a London investor meeting who spoke on condition of anonymity. The central bank declined to comment when approached regarding the reported remarks.