Turkey’s Central Bank Tries To Prop Up The Lira

 | Jun 08, 2015 07:48AM ET

For investors expecting the one-directional play of the US dollar to dominate this morning’s trading session, it’s a rude awakening: the greenback dropped from a multi-year high versus the yen after reports emerged the U.S. president is concerned about the dollar’s strength.

In the overnight session, a fall in Chinese import data, and stronger growth numbers from Japan have also helped make Monday an eventful trading session, especially after last Friday’s stellar nonfarm payrolls report. For most speculators, capital markets are certainly living up to central bankers’ current fears – heightened volatility — be it because of rate moves or fluctuations in currency prices.

Aside from the ongoing potential Grexit concerns, the euro investor’s confidence has again been rocked with the weekend’s election outcome in Turkey. The country’s ruling party lost its majority in parliament yesterday, sending Turkish assets and the lira (TRY) plummeting to new record lows ($2.8096). For the first time in a dozen years, President Recep Tayyip Erodgan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) is unable to form a majority government. Currently, the AKP is on track to win approximately +41% of the vote, falling about 18 seats short of a parliamentary majority. Investors despise uncertainty, and the market’s reaction to a potential “hung” government will always be a domestic asset selloff – equities lower, rates back up, and currency underperforms.