How Will Turkey’s FX Crisis Affect Other Parts Of The World?

 | Aug 13, 2018 09:44AM ET

The meltdown in the forex market on Friday is a reminder of why you shouldn’t be sleeping at the wheel in the month of August – either stay away or be prepared for big moves in the financial markets.

Summer vacations in Europe and the US mean lower liquidity, which can compound movements in currencies. In the first 10 trading days of August, the US dollar Index hit 1-year highs, driving EUR/USD to its lowest level since July 2017. GBP/USD hit its weakest level since June 2017 and the Australian dollar fell to its lowest since January 2017. NZD/USD reached levels not seen since March 2016. These moves were fast and aggressive, driven first by concerns about local factors (Brexit, RBNZ) and later by Turkish contagion. Economic data had very little impact on the markets and we should expect more of the same in the week ahead.

Turkey has its own troubles but it is not a localized risk. They are in a political spat with the US, the market isn’t happy with their economic policies, Washington has imposed sanctions and the rising US dollar is driving up the cost of debt. Other countries like China and Russia also have diplomatic tensions with the US, the Trump Administration has imposed sanctions on many nations, Argentina has political troubles and the stronger dollar poses serious risks for countries around the world. So in the low liquidity month of August, emerging-market troubles could spill over to the rest of the world. The European Central Bank previously expressed concerns about non-hedged exposure of European banks to Turkish companies. If Turkish banks fail, there’s no question that it will affect markets around the world.