Turkey's embattled lira slumped almost five percent to new record lows in value
against the US dollar on Wednesday after concern over President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan's new cabinet and his latest comments on interest rates.
The lira was
trading at 4.93 to the dollar, a loss of 4.7 percent on the day and appeared at
risk of dropping to five liras to the dollar for the first time in history.
The
fall means it has surpassed the record lows seen last in May ahead of an
emergency rate hike by the central bank.
Erdogan on Monday named his son-in-law
Berat Albayrak, the husband of his elder daughter Esra, as treasury and finance
minister in a cabinet reshuffle for his new term.
Albayrak's surprise switch
from the energy ministry spooked financial markets, who were also unhappy to see
there was no room for outgoing deputy prime minister Mehmet Simsek, the
government's previous pointman on the economy.
Erdogan has expressed confidence that Albayrak would "set things on the right track".
Markets are also concerned that
Erdogan underestimates the dangers posed by inflation, which surged to over 15
percent in June for the first time in almost one-and-a-half decades.
The
president was quoted by Turkish newspapers including the Hurriyet newspaper on
Wednesday as saying "we will see a decrease in interest rates," and warning high
interest rates could hurt employment.
But economists are urging tighter monetary
policy to fight inflation.
The lira has now lost 30 percent in value
against the dollar this year alone.
Source(s): AFP