April’s current account came in at US$5.3bn, better than our call at US$5.6bn, while the 12-month rolling deficit, which had been improving since the first quarter, temporarily increased to US$31.5bn (translating into c.2.7% of GDP) from US$31.3bn a month ago.
Current account (12M rolling, US$bn)
CBT, INGIn the breakdown, compared with the same month of last year, we see:
Breakdown of current account (monthly, US$bn)
CBT, INGOn the capital account, net identified flows, which were weak in the first quarter (and even negative in January), remained sluggish at US$3.2bn in April. After historic outflows ahead of March local elections, at US$9.2bn, net errors and omissions recorded a mere US$0.3bn of outflows. With the monthly current account deficit and weak flows, official reserves recorded a US$2.4bn fall.
In the breakdown of monthly data:
Breakdown of financing (monthly, US$bn)
CBT, ING12-month cumulative exports and imports have been almost flat for the last three months. This implies that exports have not been affected by the appreciation of the Turkish lira, while the downward trend in imports has stagnated since February. The provisional customs data released by the Ministry of Trade reveals that the foreign trade deficit plunged by around 48% to US$6.5bn in May. The data implies that the trend in the current account is improving again, as the impact of the recent central bank tightening on the balancing of demand factors is likely to be supportive of the external outlook. Additionally, the ongoing recovery in global economic activity is expected to have a favourable impact on Turkey’s exports and thus on the c/a balance. On the flip side, the rise in global commodity prices, particularly energy prices, may limit the slowdown in imports. On the capital account, the turnout was relatively weak in the first four months, though recent data shows a re-acceleration in inflows as foreign investor appetite towards Turkish assets increases.More By This Author:Macron’s Snap Election: A Tactical Move?
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