U.S. tariffs to stay on Turkey, Qatar offers Ankara aid
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[August 16, 2018]
By Daren Butler, Humeyra Pamuk and Jeff Mason
ISTANBUL/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United
States on Wednesday ruled out removing steel tariffs that have
contributed to a currency crisis in Turkey even if Ankara frees a U.S.
pastor, as Qatar pledged $15 billion in investment to Turkey, supporting
a rise in the Turkish lira.
The White House stance appeared to give Turkish authorities little
incentive to work for the release of Andrew Brunson, a pastor on trial
in Turkey on terrorism charges and whose case Turkish officials have
said was a matter for the courts.
The dispute is one of several between the NATO allies, including
diverging interests in Syria and U.S. objections to Ankara's ambition to
buy Russian defense systems, that have contributed to instability in
Turkish financial markets.
While the Brunson matter appeared far from being resolved, Turkish
President Tayyip Erdogan got a shot in the arm from Qatar's Emir, who
approved a package of economic projects, investments and deposits after
the two met in Ankara.
The Qatari money will be channeled into banks and financial markets, a
Turkish government source told Reuters.
The move by Turkey's Gulf ally offered further support to a lira rally
after the Turkish central bank tightened liquidity and curbed selling of
the currency.
The lira <TRYTOM=D3> has lost nearly 40 percent against the dollar this
year, driven by worries over Erdogan's growing control over the economy
and his repeated calls for lower interest rates despite high inflation.
The dispute with the United States, focused on a tit-for-tat tariff row
and Turkey's detention of Brunson, helped turn the currency's steady
decline into meltdown.
It touched a record low of 7.24 to the dollar early on Monday, rattling
global stock markets and threatening the stability of Turkey's financial
sector.
President Donald Trump doubled tariffs on Turkish metals exports to the
United States last week prompting Turkey, which says it will not bow to
threats, to raise tariffs on U.S. cars, alcohol and tobacco by the same
amount on Wednesday.
A decree by Erdogan doubled Turkish tariffs on imports of U.S. passenger
cars to 120 percent, alcoholic drinks to 140 percent and leaf tobacco to
60 percent. Tariffs were also doubled on goods such as cosmetics, rice
and coal.
The White House called the Turkish response a step in the wrong
direction and signaled a hard line on Brunson's release.
"Pastor Andrew Brunson is an innocent man held in Turkey & justice
demands that he be released. Turkey would do well not to test @POTUS
Trump’s resolve to see Americans who are wrongfully imprisoned in
foreign lands returned home to the United States," Vice President Mike
Pence said in a tweet.
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Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan attends a news conference in
Ankara, Turkey, August 14, 2018. REUTERS/Umit Bektas
Speaking in Washington, White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders made clear the
United States had no plan to remove the steel tariffs if Brunson were released
though she said it could remove sanctions imposed on two senior Turkish
officials.
The United States sanctioned Justice Minister Abdulhamit Gul and Interior
Minister Suleyman Soylu, blaming both for being involved Brunson's arrest and
detention. Brunson is accused of backing a 2016 coup attempt against Erdogan,
which Brunson denies.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu struck a somewhat conciliatory note,
saying Turkey was ready to discuss its issues with the United States as long as
there are no threats.
Despite the political tensions, the lira rebounded some 6 percent on Wednesday,
strengthening to around 6.0 to the dollar.
There was also optimism about better relations with the European Union after a
Turkish court released two Greek soldiers pending trial. Cavusoglu said ties
with the bloc, long strained, were on a firmer basis and had started
normalizing.
A banking watchdog's step to limit foreign exchange swap transactions also
helped the currency.
"They are squeezing lira liquidity out of the system now and pushing interest
rates higher," said Cristian Maggio, head of emerging markets strategy at TD
Securities.
"Rates have gone up by 10 percent ... The central bank has not done this through
a change in the benchmark rates, but they are squeezing liquidity, so the result
is the same," he said.
The lira firmed as far as 5.75 against the dollar on Wednesday and stood at 5.90
at 2058 GMT.
The finance minister will seek to reassure international investors on Thursday
in a conference call for which a ministry official said some far 3,000 people
had signed up.
The chief executive of Turkey's Akbank said the banking sector remained strong
and the measures taken to support the market had started to have an impact,
adding there was no withdrawal of deposits.
There was no resolution to the Brunson case in sight. On Wednesday, a court in
Izmir, where Brunson is on trial, rejected his appeal to be released from house
arrest. An upper court had yet to rule on the appeal, his lawyer told Reuters.
In another high-profile case, a Turkish court freed Taner Kilic, the local chair
of Amnesty International, a researcher from the rights group said.
(Additional reporting by Claire Milhench, Marc Jones and Martinne Geller in
London, Orhan Coskun in Ankara; Writing by Dominic Evans, Arshad Mohammed;
Editing by John Stonestreet and Lisa Shumaker)
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