Turkish rating threat puts debt at risk

Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Published Sep 21, 2014

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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s threat to cut ties with rating companies risks harming investor sentiment toward corporate borrowers, which have doubled their foreign debt holdings in the past four years.

Erdogan accused two of the raters of trying to “bring down Turkey”, the Hurriyet newspaper reported.

His comments followed Fitch Ratings’ inclusion of Turkey this month on a list of nations most exposed to possible downgrades if higher US interest rates shock markets.

The lira is the third-worst performing currency in Europe, the Middle East and Africa this month as investors weigh prospects for a shift in Federal Reserve policy.

Turkish borrowers have become more active on international markets since Fitch and Moody’s Investors Service raised the country to investment grade starting in 2012, before political and financial turmoil roiled sentiment.

Foreign debt holdings of private firms and banks due in one year or less jumped to $110 billion (R1 trillion) in July from $53bn in the second quarter of 2010, according to central bank data.

“Turkey should be going the extra mile to help convince rating agencies over the Turkey story, and not pulling back from engagement,” Timothy Ash, the chief economist for emerging markets at Standard Bank Group in London, said in a note on Wednesday.

“Pulling the relationship with ratings agencies will make life more difficult both for investors and ultimately for Turkey.”

The yield on Turkey’s corporate dollar debt climbed to a four-week high of 4.87 percent as of Tuesday, according to JPMorgan Chase indices.

That’s up 30 basis points since the San Francisco Fed said on September 8 that the public might be underestimating the pace of increases.

Emerging market high-grade debt increased 15 basis points to 4.38 percent, the indices show.

Fitch, which rates Turkey at the lowest investment grade of BBB-, with a stable outlook, said on September 3 that it was among those most susceptible to a cut.

That could include the Fed raising its target rate to 3 percent by the end of next year.

The Fed maintained a commitment on Wednesday to keep interest rates near zero for a “considerable time”, after asset purchases were completed – anticipated next month.

Policymakers raised their median estimate for the federal funds rate at the end of 2015 to 1.375 percent, compared with 1.125 percent in June.

Moody’s cut Turkey’s sovereign outlook to negative in April, citing political uncertainty, lower global liquidity and pressure on external financing.

That was 11 months after it raised the debt to its lowest investment grade.

Standard & Poor’s (S&P) rates the country BB+, its highest junk score, with a negative outlook.

Turkey signed a rating agreement with Fitch and Moody’s in January 2013, replacing a previous deal with S&P and Moody’s.

“Two credit rating companies are criticising Turkey with far-fetched statements,” Hurriyet newspaper cited Erdogan as saying.

“There’s a calculation to bring down Turkey, which they couldn’t crumple politically.”

The nation would “cut ties with these two institutions if necessary,” he said, without naming the companies.

Erdogan said in televised comments on Thursday that rating companies were politically motivated.

Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan said two days ago in Istanbul that the country hadn’t been able to get the credit rating it deserved, and called for companies to objectively assess Turkey.

Non-bank corporates had $35.2bn of short-term foreign debt in July, while private banks and financial institutions held the remainder, according to central bank data.

Companies with short-term foreign liabilities are vulnerable to declines in the lira, because it pushes up borrowing costs, according to Arda Tunca, the chief financial officer at Eko Faktoring.

“If earnings are not in foreign currency, such borrowing amounts to senseless risk-taking,” he said on Wednesday.

The lira has weakened 17 percent since the Fed first signalled in May last year that it would start paring stimulus.

“As the Fed interest rate increase approaches, corporate foreign holdings will come under the spotlight,” Ozlem Bayraktar Goksen at Phillip Capital in Istanbul said.

“Foreign-currency borrowing is still a source of vulnerability.” – Taylan Bilgic for Bloomberg

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