Turkey Holds Base Interest Rate at 37%

2026-03-12 11:22 By Andre Joaquim 1 min. read

The Central Bank of Turkey held its benchmark policy rate at 37% in its March 2026 meeting, aligned with recently revised market consensus as the central bank was widely expected to continue cutting interest rates until the outbreak of war in the Middle East triggered a surge in energy prices and raised the outlook inflation for major economies.

It was the first hold following five consecutive cuts, reflecting policymakers' heed to the impact that higher energy prices may have on the Turkish economy.

The central bank had already been forced to intervene in foreign exchange markets earlier in the month to contain the slide in the lira, and suspended one-week repo auctions, which lifted the lira interbank overnight reference rate by 300bps to nearly 40%.

The central bank continued to see underlying inflation as stable as of February, and signaled it will see the impact of geopolitical developments on the economy before deciding possible policy responses.



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Turkey Holds Interest Rate as Expected
The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey maintained its benchmark overnight lending rate at 37% for the third straight decision in its June 2026 meeting, aligned with market expectations. The central bank noted that the recent increase in energy prices due to the war in the Middle East has lifted the underlying trend in inflation, consolidating the swing in the balance of risks between inflation and growth that resulted in this year's end to the rate-cutting cycle. Still, the TCMB also noted that economic activity has slowed in the first quarter of the year. The bank reiterated that interest rates will remain restrictive until price stability is achieved, pushing back against any sign of accommodation to growth risks. The bank also nodded at defending the lira's stability, which was recently tested after Turkish courts removed the country's opposition leader Ozel.
2026-06-11
Turkey Holds Policy Rate at 37% as Expected
The Central Bank of Turkey kept its policy rate unchanged at 37%, as expected, along with the overnight lending rate at 40% and borrowing rate at 35.5%. It said underlying inflation eased in March, though early indicators suggest a slight pickup in April. Energy prices remain elevated and volatile due to geopolitical risks, adding uncertainty to the inflation outlook. While economic activity shows signs of slowing, the bank warned that recent developments could still feed into inflation through costs and expectations. The central bank reiterated that tight monetary policy will be maintained until price stability is achieved, with a focus on supporting disinflation via demand, exchange rate and expectations channels. It also signaled readiness to tighten further if inflation worsens, while continuing to monitor liquidity conditions and financial stability risks as it works toward its medium-term 5% inflation target.
2026-04-22
Turkey Holds Base Interest Rate at 37%
The Central Bank of Turkey held its benchmark policy rate at 37% in its March 2026 meeting, aligned with recently revised market consensus as the central bank was widely expected to continue cutting interest rates until the outbreak of war in the Middle East triggered a surge in energy prices and raised the outlook inflation for major economies. It was the first hold following five consecutive cuts, reflecting policymakers' heed to the impact that higher energy prices may have on the Turkish economy. The central bank had already been forced to intervene in foreign exchange markets earlier in the month to contain the slide in the lira, and suspended one-week repo auctions, which lifted the lira interbank overnight reference rate by 300bps to nearly 40%. The central bank continued to see underlying inflation as stable as of February, and signaled it will see the impact of geopolitical developments on the economy before deciding possible policy responses.
2026-03-12