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turkish interest rates...puzzled

scatmanjohn
Posts: 21 Forumite


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?
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?
0
Comments
-
scatmanjohn wrote: »i know i am missing something here, but what?
The inflation rate in Turkey..
Regards
Sunil0 -
that will put a spanner in the works i think.
cheers0 -
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...)0
-
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 Ibbotson0 -
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 Ibbotson0 -
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?0
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