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turkish interest rates...puzzled

My mate came back from turkey and told me the savings rates in turkey are 18%.

I said he must have the wrong end of the stick.

So i checked here:
http://www.hsbc.com.tr/eng/retail_banking/interest_rates_and_fees/interest_rates.asp#2

indeed they are 18%

Whats going on here, i know i am missing something here, but what?

Comments

  • gt94sss2
    gt94sss2 Posts: 6,184 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
    i know i am missing something here, but what?

    The inflation rate in Turkey..

    Regards
    Sunil
  • gt94sss2 wrote: »
    The inflation rate in Turkey..

    Regards
    Sunil

    that will put a spanner in the works i think.

    cheers
  • ManAtHome
    ManAtHome Posts: 8,512 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture Combo Breaker
    But the Turkish Lira has gone up against the pound by a couple of percent over the last year (looked like it was going to tank this time last year), so you could have probably pulled 15% after conversion charges over the last year (if you could have opened an account...)
  • dipsomaniac
    dipsomaniac Posts: 6,739 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
    high interest rates = high inflation = volatile exchange rate. what you gain in interest you could lose (plus more) in converting lira back to base currency.

    unless you are talking about speculating with £millions the spread between buying/selling will also be huge.

    no such thing as a free lunch - except when pret are opening a new store.
    "The Holy Writ of Gloucester Rugby Club demands: first, that the forwards shall win the ball; second, that the forwards shall keep the ball; and third, the backs shall buy the beer." - Doug Ibbotson
  • dipsomaniac
    dipsomaniac Posts: 6,739 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
    the currency can strengthen but the odds are that it is weakening otherwise the interest rate wouldn't be so high.

    risk = reward. speculating on a currency is high risk and could result in losing all of your capital. it is only a 'saving' rate in turkey.
    "The Holy Writ of Gloucester Rugby Club demands: first, that the forwards shall win the ball; second, that the forwards shall keep the ball; and third, the backs shall buy the beer." - Doug Ibbotson
  • ManAtHome
    ManAtHome Posts: 8,512 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture Combo Breaker
    I thought that last year, and "normal economics" would have suggested a drop of 15-20% so should have been well over 3 to the pound by now. From Oanda, was 2.75 a year ago, now around 2.69 (low point was 2.90 last September) - is it the "potential Euro" effect that's keeping it up?
This discussion has been closed.
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