ADVERTISEMENT

Turkey’s Trade Gap Widens in November as Gold Imports Rise

Turkey’s Trade Gap Widens in November as Gold Imports Rise

Turkey’s trade deficit widened for the fourth month in November from a year earlier as strong demand for gold drove imports higher.

The trade gap widened 154% to $5.03 billion from a revised $1.99 billion in the same month a year earlier, Turkstat said on its website on Thursday. The median estimate of eight analysts surveyed by Bloomberg was $5.1 billion.

The deteriorating foreign trade imbalance has been mainly driven by a credit explosion underpinned by interest rates kept below the country’s inflation. A weaker lira fueled price gains to well over 10% and spurred a rush for gold, an attractive store of wealth for Turkish consumers at times of currency volatility and high inflation.

Key Insights

  • Imports rose 15.9% to $21.1 billion from a year ago, driven by $2.66 billion in precious metal purchases including gold
  • Exports were down 0.9% to $16.1 billion as demand in key markets remained weak due to the coronavirus pandemic
  • The export-import coverage ratio declined to 76.2% from 89.1%
  • The January-November trade gap widened 82.5% to $45.3 billion

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.