LONDON, May 16 — Turkiye’s sovereign dollar bonds and equities tumbled, and the cost of insuring exposure to the country’s debt spiked as Turkiye’s presidential race heads to a runoff with incumbent Tayyip Erdogan leading his opposition rival.

Turkiye’s main banking stock index tumbled 9.6 per cent as markets gauged potential fallout from a possible continuation of Erdogan’s unorthodox policies including combating high inflation with low interest rates. The index rose last week 26 per cent, the largest weekly gain since late 2002.

The Istanbul bourse benchmark fell 6.1 per cent yesterday, its largest daily percentage drop since early February.

The tightly controlled lira posted its largest percentage drop in over six months to end at 19.67 per dollar -a closing record low. It earlier touched 19.70, not far from the record intraday low of 19.80 hit in March.

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Turkiye’s election board confirmed a May 28 runoff between Erdogan and opposition rival Kemal Kilicdaroglu after neither candidate secured the 50 per cent threshold to win in Sunday’s election. With most votes counted, Erdogan led with 49.51 per cent of the vote over Kilicdaroglu’s 44.88 per cent share.

In the parliamentary vote, the People’s Alliance including Erdogan’s AKP appeared headed for a majority.

“From the market reaction so far it’s very conclusive that the market is expecting Erdogan to win in the second round and we will get more of the same,” said Dan Wood, portfolio manager of emerging market debt at William Blair.

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“You can see on the sovereign bonds, investors really voted with their feet.”

Some of Turkiye’s dollar-denominated sovereign bonds fell by more than 7 cents, while the five-year Turkiye credit default swap spread jumped 141 basis points (bps) to 634 bps, the highest since November 2022, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

“I haven’t been ensuring credit risk or sovereign payment risk in Turkiye for the last three years. I’ve been declining it,” said Crispin Hodges, head of trade political risk at Canopius Group, commenting on the big spike in CDS pricing.

“Erdogan retaining power would mean the status quo would be maintained for us, where we continue to decline Turkish business because of the state of the economy, because of the inflation, because of the weak currency and because of his policy strategy.

Hard-currency bonds of Turkish lenders also came under pressure. Akbank saw its 2026 bond slip over 3 cents on the dollar to trade at just under 93 cents, the lowest since November.

The presidential vote will decide not only who leads Turkiye and shapes the foreign policy of the Nato-member country of 85 million people, but also how it is governed and how it tackles a deep cost-of-living crisis.

Last week, Turkish stocks and bonds rallied when third-party presidential candidate Muharrem Ince withdrew from the race, boosting expectations of a Kilicdaroglu win.

“Now we are back to square one,” said Emre Akcakmak, senior consultant with East Capital.

“I think if Erdogan is continuing, which is the strong base case, then foreign investors will be on the sidelines,” Akcakmak added.

Richard Briggs, Candriam senior fund manager for emerging market debt, said that an Erdogan win could mean a continuation of economic imbalance, unorthodox monetary policy and costly efforts to prop up the lira.

“If Turkiye continues to run large current account deficits, once those flows halt or reverse, pressure on the currency and the economy could be severe without a credible policy framework which is less likely under the existing administration,” Briggs said.

JPMorgan had forecast that the lira, which has weakened 5 per cent since the start of the year, could reach 24-25 to the dollar. Goldman Sachs calculations showed the market was pricing the lira to weaken by 50 per cent in the next twelve months.

Yesterday, lira volatility gauges fell, suggesting it could remain stable in the short term.

“We suspect that policymakers will pull out all the stops needed to ensure stability ahead of the second round run-off,” James Reilly, assistant economist with Capital Economics wrote in a note.

“But we think they will gradually loosen their grip on the lira thereafter, allowing a (relatively) smooth deprecation against the US dollar.” — Reuters