(Bloomberg) -- Turkish interest rates may fall as
next month's general election restores political stability to an
economy bigger than two-thirds of European Union members, Akbank
TAS's managing director said.
The July 22 vote should bring down borrowing costs provided
the new government can end a dispute over the presidency that's
kept rates high, Suzan Sabanci Dincer said in an interview at
Akbank's Istanbul headquarters. That could revive a credit boom
that's attracted Citigroup Inc. and ING Groep NV to the nation of
72 million.
Read more at Bloomberg Bonds News
next month's general election restores political stability to an
economy bigger than two-thirds of European Union members, Akbank
TAS's managing director said.
The July 22 vote should bring down borrowing costs provided
the new government can end a dispute over the presidency that's
kept rates high, Suzan Sabanci Dincer said in an interview at
Akbank's Istanbul headquarters. That could revive a credit boom
that's attracted Citigroup Inc. and ING Groep NV to the nation of
72 million.
Read more at Bloomberg Bonds News
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