HSBC revises upward Turkey’s growth forecast
The July 15 Martyrs Bridge, formerly known as the Bosporus Bridge, is seen after a snowfall in Istanbul, Feb. 16, 2021. (AA Photo)


HSBC on Tuesday went on to revise upward its projections for Turkish economic growth for both 2020 and this year, following encouraging manufacturing activity data.

The British multinational banking giant expects the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) to have grown 2% in the whole of 2020, up from its previous forecast of 1%, it said in a report.

The economy is forecast to have grown 2.9% on a quarterly basis in the October-December period, the report said. It earlier expected a contraction of 0.7%.

As for 2021, HSBS sees the economy expanding by 4.2% on an annual basis, revising upward its earlier forecast of 2.1%.

The update came after the data showed that the Turkish manufacturing sector recovery continued in December, albeit at a slightly gentler pace, amid restrictions aimed at slowing the second wave of the coronavirus outbreak.

The headline Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to 50.8 in December, its lowest level since May, from 51.4 a month earlier, staying above the 50 mark that separates expansion from contraction.

The headline index reading showed the manufacturing sector rose to 54.4 in January, posting its most robust improvement in business conditions since July 2020.

The Wall Street bank, JP Morgan, also hiked its view for Turkey’s GDP growth on Friday to 1.9% from 1.1% for 2020, while it raised the forecast for this year to 4.6%, from 3.3% previously.

In a strong rebound in the second half of 2020, the country’s GDP soared to a more-than-expected 6.7% growth rate in the third quarter.

It had contracted by 9.9% in the previous three months when lockdowns were imposed to curb the initial COVID-19 wave.

Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey’s (CBRT) new Governor Naci Ağbal last week said the economy was expected to have grown by 7% to 8% in the last quarter of 2020. This could bring the overall 2020 growth to around 2.5%, he added.

Ağbal also said the economy could grow up to 5% in the January-March period, given the economic activity in January and February.

A survey of business leaders and economists, also published Friday by the central bank, forecast the economy would log growth of 4.1% by the end of the year.

The HSBC’s report said the imbalances in the Turkish economy have not yet been corrected, stressing that core inflation remains high and may rise further in the first quarter of the year.

The annual headline inflation accelerated to 14.97% and core inflation surged to 15.5% in January, according to the official data.

The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) has said the consumer prices are set to edge higher for a few months before slowly declining to its forecast of 9.4% by year-end. The bank aims for a 5% inflation rate in the medium term.

HSBC said that the fact that food inflation continues to be high and energy inflation is on the rise also creates difficulties for the CBRT.

Electricity, gas and oil prices lifted the overall price index (CPI) last month, with transportation inflation up more than 21% from a year earlier. Food prices have hit citizens particularly hard and rose another 2.5% in a month and more than 18% in a year.

The British banking giant said it also expects Turkey’s current account deficit to narrow this year.

The gap came in at $36.7 billion in 2020, translating into around 5.3% of the GDP. HSBC expects it to go toward 3%.