Category: Business

  • Turkey scraps flights to Armenia

    Turkey scraps flights to Armenia

    ANKARA: Turkey has cancelled the first ever scheduled Turkish flights to its long-time rival Armenia, days before the first plane was due to take off, officials have said, following fierce opposition from Turkey’s ally and energy partner Azerbaijan.

    The twice-weekly flights between Turkey’s eastern city of Van and the Armenian capital Yerevan were due to begin on April 3 and, encouraged by a US push for rapprochement, were meant to boost bilateral tourism and trade.

    But with just over a week until the first flight, and with tickets already on sale, Turkey’s civil aviation authority stepped in and ordered the flights to be suspended.

    Officials at Turkey’s transport ministry confirmed the flights had been stopped but declined to give a reason.   BoraJet, the private Turkish carrier set to fly the 45-minute route, has also declined to comment on the stoppage. One BoraJet official twice denied the Van-Yerevan flights had ever been planned, even though the route was still available as a booking option on the firm’s website on Monday.

    Narekavank Tour, a Yerevan-based travel agency which has spent the last three years organising the flights together with a Turkish travel agency in Van, said the reason was political.

    “The organisers were keen on staying away from politics. It is very sad and discouraging that Turkish authorities were not able to do the same and finally let politics interfere with this promising initiative,” it said in a statement. Asked if he thought this was due to specific pressure from Azerbaijan, Armen Hovhannisyan, co-founder of Narekavank Tour, said: “Of course, it’s part of the whole formula, and maybe they have been working behind the scenes.”

    Officially at war, Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a bitter dispute over the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh – a mountainous enclave within Azerbaijan with a majority Armenian population – which Armenian-backed forces seized along with seven surrounding Azeri districts in 1991.

    Turkey, which has never opened an embassy in Armenia, closed its land border in 1993 in a show of solidarity with Azerbaijan, a Muslim and Turkic-speaking ally which also supplies Ankara with billions of cubic metres of Caspian natural gas each year.

    Reuters

    via Turkey scraps flights to Armenia.

  • [chart] Turkey GDP: quick, quick, slow

    [chart] Turkey GDP: quick, quick, slow

    by Rob Minto

    So much for the T in Mist: Turkish GDP for the fourth quarter of 2012 was just 1.4 per cent – lower than consensus forecast and the lowest rate since 2009.

    Overall it made for 2.2 per cent growth for the full year – a marked slowdown from the previous two years, when 8 plus per cent was the norm. [Chart after the break.]

    Here’s the chart:

    Turkey-GDP-monthly-yoy

    Source: Bloomberg

    As Daniel Dombey wrote in the FT:

    Turkey’s economic slowdown has been largely engineered by the financial authorities, who raised interest rates last year amid fears of economic overheating. The figures come at a time when economists say signs are mixed over the future strength of Turkey’s economy.

    via [chart] Turkey GDP: quick, quick, slow | beyondbrics.

  • ECONOMICS – ‘S&P apologizes to Turkey as Israeli did’

    ECONOMICS – ‘S&P apologizes to Turkey as Israeli did’

    Standard and Poor’s (S&P), the credit ratings agency that has recently upgraded Turkey’s notch, apologized to Turkey just like Israel did, Turkey’s Economy Minister Zafer Çağlayan has said.

    “S&P is trying to save its reputation and it apologized to Turkey as Israeli did. I call it ‘Double S&P’ because it is an institution that applies a double standard,” Çağlayan said at the meeting of Turkish Enterprise and Business Confederation (Türkonfed) on March 30.

    Çağlayan criticized the agency that gave the same notch to Turkey as the Philippines, Croatia and Romania. He appealed to both S&P and Moody’s to revise Turkey’s notch “to save their reputation.”

    S&P upgraded Turkey’s sovereign debt rating to just one step below investment grade on March 27. The agency lifted Turkey’s sovereign credit rating to BB-plus from BB with a stable outlook, citing a rebalancing economy and progress in a Kurdish peace process and noting that its external financing requirements had declined thanks to strong exports and a drop in domestic demand.

    However, Moody’s has made it clear that Turkey’s ongoing vulnerabilities were holding the country back despite Turkish investors expecting a possible upgrade by the agency.

    Fitch is the only ratings institution among the top three to have kept Turkey in the “investible” category. It upgraded Turkey to an investment grade of BBB in November, citing its moderate and declining levels of public debt.

    Free trade deal

    Çağlayan said Turkey should get involved in the Transatlantic Free Trade Agreement between the United States and the European Union. If the parties did not allow Turkey to participate, then the country should set forth its final opinion to the EU, he said.

    Speaking at the same event, Turkey’s EU Minister Egemen Bağış said Turkey would not allow the EU’s bilateral agreements to cause unfair competition for Turkey.

    The U.S. and EU launched moves on Feb. 13 to open negotiations on a new free trade pact that seeks to eliminate or minimize barriers everywhere. The free trade agreements between the EU and third parties enable these other countries’ goods to enter European markets or Turkish markets via Europe with zero duties, but the decision to provide the same privileges to Turkey is up to the discretion of the third party.

    Turkey exported around $5.6 billion worth of goods to the U.S. while importing $14 billion in 2012, according to figures.

    April/01/2013

    via ECONOMICS – ‘S&P apologizes to Turkey as Israeli did’.

  • TURKEY : commercial banks to count gold deposits toward their reserve requirements

    TURKEY : commercial banks to count gold deposits toward their reserve requirements

    PRECIOUS METALS
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    ALLEN SYKORA
    Kitco News

    “Turkey’s move … to allow commercial banks to count gold deposits toward their reserve requirements … would mean a “renaissance” of gold as a monetary asset…””…on the monetary side, this is pure genius,” “…central banks looking to diversify away from major currencies such as the dollar.”
    Turkey’s move one and a half years ago to allow commercial banks to count gold deposits toward their reserve requirements potentially could be emulated by other central banks, and if so, would mean a “renaissance” of gold as a monetary asset, a New York-based consultancy says.

    The end result of the Turkish rules has been to free up lending to support the economy at a time when many other countries are struggling to get banks to provide funds to borrowers, the consultancy said.

    The privately owned gold held in Turkish commercial banks has shown up on the balance sheet for the central bank, resulting in news reports of inflated official-sector reserves in the country, the consultancy said.

    “But on the monetary side, this is pure genius,” said Jeffrey Christian, managing director of CPM Group. “We think that it will be emulated by other governments and other central banks.”

    And if so, this would be a “major move forward toward what a lot of major central banks would like to see,” which CPM Group said is monetary and private-sector financial reserves dispersed across currencies – including gold – rather than the heavy global reliance upon the U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency.

    This ultimately would provide an underpinning for the price of gold, even if it doesn’t directly mean higher prices from increased buying, Christian said.

    “This is potentially a really big step forward in the rehabilitation of gold as a monetary-reserve asset,” he said.

    In September 2011, neighbouring Greece was in the throes of a massive debt crisis. European leaders were struggling to deal with the situation. Around the same time, U.S. lawmakers were in a stalemate over how to deal with their deficits and the country’s credit rating was downgraded. Gold prices hit a record high on safe-haven buying. Money and gold were moving into Turkey, Christian said.

    The country’s central bank acted by creating the “Reserve Operation Mechanism.” This provided its commercial banks the option of meeting a portion of their Turkish lira reserve requirements with alternatives, said Erica Rannestad, commodity analyst with CPM Group.

    Initially, banks could meet 10 per cent of this with other currencies such as the dollar or euro, plus another 10 per cent with gold held on deposit at their banks. This was unprecedented in modern times for a central bank, the consultancy said. The percentage for gold was increased to 20 per cent in March 2012, then 25 per cent in June and finally 30 per cent by August.

    So far, the measures have been successful for Turkey’s central bank, Rannestad said. They have meant more liquidity for the financial system and lower borrowing costs.

    “You could see other central banks become more interested in adopting similar policies,” Rannestad said. In particular, she cited potential for India to take such steps. The country historically has been the world’s largest gold-buying nation and its denizens collectively have what Rannestad described as a large amount of “under-the-mattress” gold. Should India follow Turkey’s example, this could mean increased funding for the economy at a time of slower economic growth.

    Ironically, despite the affinity for gold in India, the government also has been taking steps to limit gold imports – such as implementing duties – to control a high current-account deficit that has undermined the Indian rupee in recent years.

    “The Indian government and Reserve Bank of India have been trying to figure out ways to reduce gold imports and mobilize the gold in their country,” Rannestad said. She later added, “This could be an alternative solution to their issues.”

    Such policies by themselves might not necessarily increase the overall demand for gold, she said. Turkish banks are not actually increasing their purchases. Instead, they are better able to utilize existing holdings of clients to free up liquidity in the banking system.

    Still, “this could be a renaissance for gold in its role in the monetary system,” Rannestad said.

    Already, Rannestad said, there is a renaissance of gold as a monetary tool, as reflected by increased buying in recent years from central banks looking to diversify away from major currencies such as the dollar. The consultancy said central banks collectively have been net buyers since 2008, after previously being mostly net sellers since 1965. And, as gold becomes a more important tool in the monetary system, central banks likely would continue their accumulation, CPM Group said.

    Reports Of Turkish Central-Bank Holdings Often Distorted

    The consultancy cautioned that one impact of the Turkish rules has been to create the impression that central-bank purchases of gold have been even higher than has actually been the case. CPM Group estimated central banks added 9.5 million ounces in 2012, or roughly 8 per cent of mined and secondary supply.

    However, CPM Group said, the privately owned gold held by commercial banks in Turkey was showing up in data as though it was holdings of the central bank itself. As a result, the consultancy has adjusted its data on net official transactions to account for this. The consultancy said from October 2011 to December 2012, the country’s reported monetary reserves rose 7.8 million ounces. However, this was not gold bought by the central bank on the open market and instead was gold held by investors and others in commercial banks.

    “It’s still a bullish story,” Rannestad said of global central-bank purchases. “But it could lead to inflated views of central-bank activity.”

    Daniela Cambone contributed to this story.

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  • Cyprus ponders another start

    Cyprus ponders another start

    AS IT grapples with the prospect of years of economic pain, Cyprus will try to draw strength from its not-so-distant experience of invasion – and the fact that a whole generation knows what it means to rebuild from scratch.

    But it is a tough task.

    Customers queue up outside a branch of Laiki Bank as they wait for the reopening of the bank in Nicosia. Picture: REUTERS
    Customers queue up outside a branch of Laiki Bank as they wait for the reopening of the bank in Nicosia. Picture: REUTERS

    Any inspiration will be badly needed in the small east Mediterranean island nation of under a million people, as even the most optimistic forecasters predict years of recession and sky-high unemployment.

    In many ways, the challenge facing Cyprus now, following an international bailout that effectively wipes out a hefty chunk of the banking sector, is more daunting than the events of 1974 when the island was split into an internationally recognised Greek-speaking south and a breakaway Turkish north, following Turkey’s invasion in the wake of an attempted coup by supporters of union with Greece.

    The country’s room for manoeuvre is limited, given that it has already largely exhausted the potential for development from a primarily agricultural state.

    And any reboot of the economy of the Greek-Cypriot side – the part of the island that has joined the European Union and is afflicted by the recent bailout woes – will have to be done within the limitations of a colossal debt mountain, a collapsed property bubble, a sclerotic European economy and a seeming dearth of international sympathy.

    “It’s an economic tragedy this time and the difference is you don’t know where it’ll end up,” said Andreas Georgiou, 80. “This could stir social unrest, people are worried about their families and about putting their kids through school. In 1974, we had support from the outside, our people were willing to go abroad and find work to send money home. But could this happen again?”

    After the invasion, Turkey ended up with control of nearly 40% of the island and much of its economic potential.

    Greek-Cypriots were largely cut off from the world, losing the deep-water port of Famagusta and the international airport in Nicosia, which has since been home to peacekeeping troops from the United Nations.

    The Turkish side also ended up with the bulk of the country’s pre-1974 agricultural base as well as the lion’s share of the burgeoning tourism industry.

    And tens of thousands of refugees living in camps had to be rehoused.

    The University of Cyprus has estimated that the invasion and division cost Greek- Cypriot individuals and companies over à109-billion.

    Despite the economic devastation wrought by the invasion, Cyprus found itself on the mend, at least economically, within a few years of the event as the government backed a series of emergency economic plans with international support.

    Between 1976 and 1997 Cyprus was growing at over 6% a year, with tourism at the heart of the economy’s rebirth.

    Businesses, big and small, prevailed as many of the country’s youth returned home after getting university degrees around the world, notably from Greece, Britain, and the US.

    “A lesson that came out of 1974 was that people learnt that you could lose your property and your money, but if you’ve got an education, you can start again and rebuild,” said James Ker-Lindsay, a senior research fellow at the London School of Economics, who has written extensively on modern Cyprus.

    However, one unintended consequence of that drive to educate was the unbalancing of the Cypriot economy away from agriculture and tourism towards financial services, said Ker-Lindsay.

    The booming financial sector got a further turbo charge from the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and Russian money – some thought to be of dubious origin – started flowing into the country’s banks, an influx of capital that further unbalanced the economy.

    Membership of the EU in 2004 and the adoption of the euro four years later were meant to solidify the country’s advance and set a course for further prosperity.

    However, Europe’s debt crisis, and in particular the problems of Greece, tore up the Cypriot economic model and the country eventually had to accept an onerous package of measures to stave off bankruptcy.

    – Sapa-AP

    * This article was first published in Sunday Times: Business Times

    via Cyprus ponders another start | Business Times | BDlive.

  • Turkey steel product imports up by 19pct in January

    Turkey steel product imports up by 19pct in January

    According to the Turkish Iron and Steel Producers’ Association, in January this year Turkey’s total steel product imports amounted to 1.2 million metric tonnes rising 19.1% compared to the same month of the previous year with a total revenue of USD 985 million up 6.9% YoY. In January this year, the average price of Turkey’s steel imports stood at USD 850 per MT falling compared to the average of USD 947 per tonne recorded in the same month of 2012.

    In January, Turkey’s steel billet imports decreased 10.4% YoY amounting to 209,000 tonnes while the country imported 178,000 tonnes of steel slab with a significant increase compared to January 2012. In the month in question, Turkey imported 580,483 tonnes of flat rolled steel up 3.2% while its long steel imports came to 122,000 tonnes rising 24.1% both compared to the same month of the previous year.

    Source – Visit www.steelorbis.com for more

    via Turkey steel product imports up by 19pct in January – 307236 -.