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    Home»World Economy»Turkey’s Treasury Dump | Armstrong Economics
    World Economy

    Turkey’s Treasury Dump | Armstrong Economics

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteMay 27, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Turkey did not sell off its US Treasury holdings because Erdogan suddenly discovered some brilliant new economic strategy. This is what governments do when the pressure begins to rise and the walls start closing in. The latest TIC data showed Turkey’s long-term US Treasury holdings collapsed from roughly $11.1 billion in February to about $839 million in March. That is not normal portfolio management. That is a sign of stress.

    I have warned that Turkey is one of the key geopolitical pressure points because it sits between East and West, Europe and Asia, NATO and the Islamic world. Everyone pretends Turkey is just another emerging market, but that is absurd. Turkey controls the Bosporus, it borders the Middle East, it has one of the largest militaries in NATO, and Erdogan has long tried to position himself as the leader of a revived Ottoman sphere. This is why Turkey matters far beyond the lira.

    The Iran crisis has exposed the weakness. Turkey imports energy. When war sends energy prices higher, inflation returns immediately through the back door. Inflation is already above 32%, the central bank has held rates at 37%, and now the market is talking about rates going to 40%. That is not strength. That is a government fighting a currency crisis with interest rates while pretending everything is stable.

    The debt crisis is not simply about government debt-to-GDP ratios. That is the nonsense economists use when they want to ignore capital flows. Turkey’s problem is external vulnerability, inflation, reserve pressure, foreign capital dependence, and the rising cost of rolling debt in a world where capital is no longer blindly funding everyone. ING estimated Turkey’s gross borrowing needs could rise more than 62% this year to TRY 6.382 trillion, driven by redemptions and higher debt costs. That is the debt crisis in motion.

    Turkey sees the US and Israel as a joint entity now. As I repeatedly warned, nations do not buy the debt of their enemies. Turkey vehemently opposed Israel’s demolition of Gaza and it matters not that the US is a NATO “ally.” In an Eid holiday speech, Erdogan predicted that Turkey would rise as “one of the shining stars of the new era,” adding that the nation will restore peace to the region. “With defence and aerospace exports rising from $248 million to more than $10 billion, Türkiye is writing a rare success story in the world,” he added. Erdogan sees the conflict as an opportunity to achieve his long-standing dream of reviving the glory of the Ottoman Empire.

    Ottoman Empire - Students | Britannica Kids | Homework Help

    This is how sovereign debt crises begin. It is not one dramatic headline. It is a sequence. First the currency weakens. Then reserves are burned defending it. Then inflation returns. Then rates rise. Then the government must issue more debt at higher costs. Then foreign capital becomes nervous. Then the politicians blame speculators, foreigners, oil, war, or anyone except themselves.

    Turkey selling Treasuries is part of the same global trend I have warned about. The world is no longer treating US debt as the unquestioned foundation of the monetary system. Foreign governments are looking at Washington, the war cycle, sanctions, deficits, and political instability, and they are beginning to diversify. Some are forced to sell because they need dollars. Others are selling because they no longer trust the system. Either way, the message is the same.

    Turkey’s Treasury dump is another warning that the world monetary system is fracturing, and the fools in government still think they can borrow forever, manipulate rates forever, and drag the world into war without consequence.



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