Turkey looked to be heading toward trouble in the summer of 2022: it was selling reserves to cover a growing current account deficit.
But Erdogan pulled a rabbit or two out of the hat in the H2 2022; reserves are now rising even with the persistent external deficit.
1/x
To be sure, Turkey's balance of payments doesn't look healthy --
There hasn't been any real demand for Turkey's government debt for a while (especially the TL bonds, but recent FX issue largely offset earlier maturities)
2/
And the banks understandable don't want to rollover costly long-term (often 1 year + 1 day) loans -- they have more domestic deposits than they need in any case.
3/
So the current account deficit hasn't been financed by relatively more stable long-term flows --
4/
Rather the bulk of the inflow -- setting "errors" aside -- has come from potentially risky short-term deposits (and a reduction in the banks' external liquidity buffer, which is part of the "net" deposit flow)
5/
Zooming in a bit, the recent rebound in reserves has mostly come from:
-- the Rosatom loan (the yellow bar)
-- CBRT swaps + cross border deposits (from geopolitical friends of Turkey)
-- renewed Eurobond issuance (some likely to Turkish banks)
6/
But the CBRT's reserves have been increasing faster than its external debt -- there isn't any imminent risk that Turkey is going to run out.
(of course, having $70b in reserves/ $20b in illiquid currencies isn't great if you have $30b or so in external debt)
7/
The November reverse increase though was a bit bigger than can be explained by the eurobond issue.
As this chart illustrates Turkey's banks also ran down their stock of offshore deposits (more than covering external debt repayment)
(Chart sums flows to infer stocks)
8/
Turkey still isn't in a great place. I wouldn't want to manage an economy when the central banks net fx position is negative by any measure. And the end December reserves dipped a bit.
But Ergogan's geo-financial strategy has bought Turkey a bit of time.
9/9
p.s. the chart above nets out illiquid reserves from the swaps with Qatar and the UAE to try to estimate liquid reserve assets. I also netted out the PBOC swap as I am not sure that the CBRT's CNY are usable, but I don't have a strong view on that specific adjustment.
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One global trend that I don't think has gotten enough attention -- the global goods trade surplus is increasingly a Chinese surplus.
1/x
China now accounts for something like 80% of the goods surplus of the large east Asian economies -- and that is because China's surplus is up not because other surpluses have disappeared.
2/
China's surplus now dwarfs Europe's surplus -- and Japan runs a deficit in goods trade (its current account surplus is from investment income).
Europe's surplus also almost goes away if you net out profit shifting pharmaceutical trade (file that one away)
Saudi Arabia ran a current account deficit in the third quarter, as oil export receipts didn't cover current external spending.
With a balance of payments break even of around $90 a barrel, the q4 external deficit will be large ...
1/x
For full year 2024 the Saudis are on track to register a small current account deficit, as spending on imports is up ("Visions" that include new cities in the desert aren't cheap) and oil export revenue is down ...
2/
MBS still wants to build up the size of his SWF (which, excluding domestic assets, isn't as big as the funds of his neighbors) and has kept on buying foreign stocks even as the current account surplus disappeared.
It isn't clear that President Xi would share the suggesting in Ling-ling Wei's latest assessment of China's economy that China is flirting with a lost decade -- but that in a sense is the point ...
1/
Xi looks at China's success in building a world leading EV industry, the emergence of a semiconductor design and manufacturing cluster centered around Huawei and SMIC and China's strength in clean technology manufacturing and sees a success story ...
2/
. @Lingling_Wei and many liberal Chinese economist see an economy that is still stifled by the heavy hand o the state (and the party), and that can neither safely lever up nor grow without levering up and see an economy that has lost its dynamism
I see that President elect Trump's eye has turned to the trade deficit with Europe --
So a reminder that the single most important thing the US could do to bring down the deficit with the EU is to reform the US corporate tax code to end the pro pharma offshoring provisions
1/
Since the TCJA was passed, US pharma imports have gone to from just over $100b to just under $250b, and imports from the EU in particular have soared ...
(and that is mostly US firms producing in Europe/ especially Ireland) for the US market
2/
In fact we are currently seeing a big surge in pharma impacts form Ireland, as firms selectively locate the production of new patented protected drugs there (laying the legal basis to avoid paying the 21% US headline rate on their US sales)
First, I have always placed a lot of stock in the trade data (customs data) because it can be mapped against counterpart data. And that data shows a sharp deceleration in China's domestic economy in 2024. (given the pace of exports, imports should be up ... )
2/
The oil import numbers have been impacted by China's EV revolution. But they are a clean check on import volume data -- and they show an economy that isn't demanding more oil, which often (tho not always) is a sign of weakness (demand is at 2019 levels ... )
The q3 US current account deficit reached 4.2% of US GDP, and, in a milestone of sorts, the US balance on investment income turned negative ...
1/
Now the US still has a bit of privilege -- with a net external debt position of 45% of GDP (depends a bit on bond market valuation) and a negative net equity position, the income balance should be negative ... the world owns more US assets than the US owns global assets
2/
The deterioration of the income balance, somewhat surprisingly, has been driven more by a deterioration in the FDI/ equity balance than by higher net interest payments (those have been stable at ~ -1.3 pp of GDP)