Economy April 10, 2026 06:36 PM

Fitch shifts Turkey outlook to stable, flags mounting external and inflationary strains

Ratings agency keeps BB- rating but warns reserves erosion and Iran conflict risks could exacerbate Turkey’s macro vulnerabilities

By Hana Yamamoto
Fitch shifts Turkey outlook to stable, flags mounting external and inflationary strains

Fitch has moved Turkey's sovereign outlook from "positive" to "stable" while affirming the country's long-term foreign-currency rating at "BB-." The agency pointed to a sharp drawdown in foreign exchange reserves driven by heavy intervention to support the lira, along with persistent macroeconomic weaknesses including high inflation, large external financing needs and limited reserve buffers. Fitch also cautioned that an escalated or prolonged conflict involving Iran could raise energy costs, widen the current account deficit and complicate the process of disinflation.

Key Points

  • Fitch changed Turkey's sovereign outlook from "positive" to "stable" but kept the long-term foreign-currency rating at "BB-." - Markets and sovereign credit assessments
  • The agency cited a sharp erosion in foreign exchange reserves driven by heavy intervention to support the lira, alongside high inflation and large external financing needs. - Banking, external financing and currency-sensitive sectors
  • Fitch warned that a prolonged Iran conflict could raise energy prices and widen the current account deficit, complicating disinflation efforts. - Energy imports, trade balance and broader macro stability

April 10 - Credit rater Fitch has revised Turkey's outlook to "stable" from "positive," while maintaining the country's long-term foreign-currency rating at "BB-." The decision reflects what the agency described as a sharp reduction in foreign exchange reserves, largely tied to aggressive market intervention aimed at supporting the lira, and growing risks linked to the conflict in Iran.

Fitch highlighted a set of persistent macroeconomic vulnerabilities. The agency noted that inflation remains elevated compared with peer countries, external financing requirements are substantial, and reserve buffers are weak despite some earlier improvements. It further observed that Turkey's external debt is large relative to its available reserves.

The report underlined the potential for geopolitical developments to worsen those strains. Fitch warned that a prolonged conflict involving Iran could push up energy prices, widen Turkey's current account deficit and make disinflation more difficult to achieve. As the agency put it: "A more protracted conflict would further pressure Turkiye's external finances and inflation, mainly due to its sizeable energy trade deficit."

Fitch's move follows an earlier upgrade to the country's outlook to "positive" in January. The reversal to "stable" signals the rater's view that downside risks to Turkey's external position and inflation outlook have increased amid reserve depletion and heightened geopolitical uncertainty.

While the long-term foreign-currency rating itself was held at "BB-," the change in outlook signals a less favorable near-term trajectory in the agency's assessment. The combination of heavy FX intervention, elevated inflation relative to peers, and sizeable external financing needs formed the core rationale Fitch cited for adjusting the outlook.

The rating agency's commentary specifically linked energy exposures to external and price risks. Given Turkey's sizeable energy trade deficit, the agency said, any marked rise in global energy prices - should the Iran conflict persist or broaden - would add pressure to external balances and complicate efforts to bring inflation down.

Fitch's assessment emphasizes the interplay between monetary support of the currency, reserve adequacy and external financing pressures, all set against a backdrop of geopolitical risk that could amplify economic strains.

Risks

  • Eroded foreign exchange reserves due to market intervention - risk to central bank capacity to defend the currency and to external liquidity in the banking sector
  • High inflation running well above peers together with large external financing needs - risk to real incomes, consumer-facing sectors and investor confidence
  • A protracted conflict involving Iran lifting energy prices and widening the current account deficit - risk to energy-importing sectors and external balances

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