Brad Setser Profile picture
Jan 11, 2023 10 tweets 4 min read Read on X
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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More from @Brad_Setser

Apr 1
Martin Wolf seems to think China's recent export surge has reached its natural limits: "investing even more in manufacturing just guarantees ever more excess capacity and thus protection aimed against the inevitable surges of Chinese exports"

nice chart too ;) Image
Wolf confirms that China seems a real upside in Trump's global trade war --

ft.com/content/80ab4a…
Hard to disagree

"what is happening to the US has clear upsides for their own country [China]. It has dawned on just about everybody by now that Trump’s signature is worthless. A man who is trying to demolish the Canadian economy is not going to be a reliable friend to anybody else"
Read 5 tweets
Mar 31
The Saudi balance of payments for q4 is out, and it confirms that Saudi Arabia ran a current account deficit in 2024 -- and (per my estimates), the balance of payments "breakeven" for Saudi Arabia is around $90 a barrel.

1/ Image
One implication, of course, is that the Saudis are on track to run a substantial external deficit in 2025 --

(@Rory_Johnston can improve the estimated breakeven with a better net oil exports number for 2024!)

2/ Image
@Rory_Johnston Spending on imports (broadly defined, includes services) is above where it was back in 2014 -- The various MBS visions didn't come cheap

3/ Image
Read 9 tweets
Mar 31
I haven't loved those trade offs to be honest --

Say a US firm gets access to Korea's local market to sell insurance. It won't employ Americans to run that business ... the firm's global business benefits, but there is little impact on the US economy

1/
The classic example is TPP, where the US would have liberalized the US auto market (the 'TPP" content requirement was lower than the "NAFTA" content requirement) in exchange for stronger protection of offshore pharmaceutical IP

2/
That would have raised the offshore profits of US big pharma (i.e. more production and profit in Singapore) but not generated more direct activity in the US as big pharma never liked manufacturing in the US for global sales (and paying US tax)

3/
Read 4 tweets
Mar 31
One sign of "American exceptionalism" (US equity outperformance + sustained demand for US debt through thick and thin) is that the US has a lot more external liabilities than external assets.

A lot more!

1/ Image
I have focused heavily on the net external debt position precisely because it doesn't hinge heavily on stock market valuations (and the FDI position is a bit problematic as foreign FDI is valued using the US stock market). 2/ Image
Of course valuation still plays a small rose there -- the market value of foreign holdings of US bonds is about $1.5 trillion below the purchase price (using the sum of flows)

3/ Image
Read 13 tweets
Mar 31
I usually focus on non-petrol trade because oil has its own unique dynamics. But if there really is an across the board 20% tariff on all imports, the pre-tariff baseline is imports of 11% of GDP ...

1/ Image
Some simple tariff math. The "just pay it" cost is thus 2.2% of GDP. But actual tax revenue from the tariff will be lower. If the short-term elasticity is 1, imports fall by a little more than 2% of GDP, to around 9 pp of GDP & the direct tax revenue is 1.75 pp of GDP. 2/
That is a big sum, particularly as it is being put in place ahead of any offsetting tax cuts. Moreover as @jnordvig highlighted over the weekend, Trump is taking a real risk by implementing the tariff in a way that maximizes uncertainty ... 3/
Read 11 tweets
Mar 29
The most important fact about China's q4 balance of payments is that the surplus is still way below what it should be -- a $1 trillion in goods surplus, $200-250b deficit in services and positive $3 trillion net investment position should generate a surplus of over $750b ...

1/ Image
But even if the current account surplus is understated, it isn't quite as understated as it was in the first half of 2024 ... the reported surplus, FDI flows and portfolio inflows do imply that Chinese residents should be accumulating about $125b a quarter in foreign assets. 2/ Image
And there has been a resumption in the state bank outflow ... including notable purchases of foreign bonds by the state banks

3/ Image
Read 9 tweets

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