Stock Markets May 22, 2026 08:28 AM

Turkish Markets Stage Recovery After Political-Driven Selloff

Stocks, bonds and banking shares rebound as markets absorb court ruling that spurred a sharp drop

By Ajmal Hussain
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Turkey's financial markets rebounded on Friday after abrupt losses earlier in the week tied to political developments and currency depreciation. The BIST 100 climbed more than 2.5% after a 6% decline the previous day that triggered a trading halt, government bonds traded abroad recovered, banking stocks regained ground and the lira remained at a record low of 45.74 per dollar.

Turkish Markets Stage Recovery After Political-Driven Selloff
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Key Points

  • BIST 100 climbed more than 2.5% on Friday, recovering from a 6% drop on Thursday that prompted a trading suspension - equity markets impacted.
  • Turkish sovereign bonds traded internationally recovered after their steepest daily fall since March - fixed income markets impacted.
  • Banking stocks rebounded 1.2% after a nearly 9% plunge the previous session, which had been their largest single-day fall in over a year - banking sector impacted.

Summary

Turkey's markets recovered on Friday following steep declines driven by political news and pressure on the currency. Equities, sovereign debt traded internationally and banking sector shares all posted gains as trading resumed after heavy selling the previous session.


Market moves

The BIST 100 index in Istanbul rose more than 2.5% on Friday, reversing part of a 6% drop recorded on Thursday that had forced a temporary suspension of trading. That earlier rout followed a top court decision that effectively removed the main opposition leader Ozgur Ozel from his position, a development that had been associated with the sharp selloff.

Turkish government bonds that trade in international markets also recovered on Friday after suffering their steepest one-day fall since March during Thursday's turbulence. Banking shares, which had plunged nearly 9% in the prior session - their largest single-day fall in over a year - gained 1.2% on Friday.


Currency and risk indicators

The Turkish lira remained at a new record low, trading at 45.74 per dollar. The currency has fallen almost 6% so far this year under a managed depreciation policy. In parallel, the cost of insuring Turkish sovereign debt via credit default swaps rose to a six-week high after Thursday's market disruption.


Context and implications

Friday's recovery saw multiple market segments retrace some of Thursday's losses: the main equity benchmark, international sovereign bond prices and banking stocks all registered gains. However, the currency's record low level and the rise in credit default swap costs indicate that market stress persisted, even as risk assets regained footing during the session.


Data points cited in this report

  • BIST 100: rose more than 2.5% on Friday after a 6% drop on Thursday that led to a trading suspension.
  • Banking stocks: gained 1.2% on Friday after falling nearly 9% the previous session.
  • Turkish lira: hit a record low of 45.74 per dollar and has declined nearly 6% this year under a managed depreciation policy.
  • Credit default swaps: cost of insuring Turkish debt climbed to a six-week high following Thursday's market turbulence.
  • Turkish government bonds traded internationally: recovered after their steepest decline since March on Thursday.

Reporting in this piece is confined to the market moves and indicators explicitly referenced above.

Risks

  • Political developments linked to the top court decision that effectively removed the main opposition leader are associated with market volatility - equity and political risk.
  • The Turkish lira sits at a record low of 45.74 per dollar and has declined nearly 6% this year under a managed depreciation policy, creating currency risk for importers and foreign investors - currency risk.
  • Rising costs to insure Turkish sovereign debt, with credit default swaps at a six-week high, point to increased perceived sovereign credit risk - sovereign debt markets risk.

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