--- title: "Turkey Restarts FX Swaps to Counter War Impact on Reserves" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/281160516.md" description: "Turkey has restarted foreign-currency swap transactions with local banks for the first time in a year, opening three dollar-for-lira swap auctions totaling $10 billion. This move comes after a significant drawdown in reserves due to a selloff in emerging markets amid the ongoing war in the Middle East. The central bank aims to maintain FX liquidity and a stable exchange rate, despite challenges posed by rising energy costs and increased dollar demand. The lira has only dropped 1.2% since the war began, showing relative resilience compared to other emerging-market currencies." datetime: "2026-03-31T09:30:57.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/281160516.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/281160516.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281160516.md) --- # Turkey Restarts FX Swaps to Counter War Impact on Reserves Turkey restarted foreign-currency swap transactions with local banks for the first time in a year, after a drawdown in reserves fueled by a broad selloff across emerging markets amid the war in the Middle East. The Turkish central bank on Tuesday opened three separate dollar-for-lira swap auctions totaling $10 billion, with maturities ranging from one week to one month, under which it will borrow dollars from lenders in exchange for liras. Governor said the resumption of swap deals shows “there’s no issue with regards to FX liquidity in the system and that the exchange rate regime we’re pursuing is functioning in a healthy manner,” according to state-run Anadolu news agency. The announcement came after the monetary authority drained around 2 trillion liras ($45 billion) from the interbank market in March, a step aimed at maintaining a tight monetary stance. The US and Israel started a war on Iran on Feb. 28, triggering outflows from riskier assets and declines in nearly all emerging-market currencies tracked by Bloomberg. The lira has emerged relatively unscathed, dropping 1.2% since the war began, compared with declines of 6.8% in South Africa’s rand and 6.5% in Chile’s peso. But scarce lira liquidity drew banks’ ire, with some executives a resumption of currency swap transactions to ease the squeeze. Earlier in March, the central bank tightened monetary conditions by providing funding via its costlier overnight lending rate of 40% instead of lending via one-week repo auctions at its policy rate of 37%. FX swaps with local lenders were criticized in the past for providing a temporary boost to foreign reserves without actual foreign inflows. Turkey’s gross foreign exchange reserves fell by more than $12 billion during the three-week period through March 20, according to the most recent official data compiled by Bloomberg. Since the start of the war, the Turkish central bank has spent more than $30 billion from its reserves, including through , to shield the lira from conflict-driven turbulence seen across emerging markets. Turkey’s monetary strategy relies on maintaining a stable lira when adjusted for inflation, with state-run banks intervening in the foreign exchange market when needed. Higher energy import costs and increased dollar demand amid the ongoing conflict in the Middle East could make that strategy more challenging to sustain. “We are faced with an external situation that’s affecting our inflation fight negatively. We are determined to maintain the necessary tightness for the continuation of disinflation,” Karahan said Tuesday. On Monday, central bank Deputy Governor warned of the uncertainty emanating from the war and the potential risks to Turkey’s economy. “The proactive measures we took were very appropriate. We are now looking on a daily basis whether the ones we’ve taken later are enough,” he told reporters in Istanbul. “Restarting swaps alone doesn’t mean much but it could be a very appropriate measure with different combinations,” he added. “We are looking at everything. We’re looking at it day and night.” ### Related Stocks - [TUR.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/TUR.US.md) ## Related News & Research - [Why the US dollar is losing its shine — and 4 ways it’ll shape your spending](https://longbridge.com/en/news/287098191.md) - [Euro Technical Outlook: EUR/USD Weakness Builds as Fed Hike Risks Return to Markets](https://longbridge.com/en/news/287087735.md) - [The Limits of Limit Orders in Retail FX/CFD Trading](https://longbridge.com/en/news/287126072.md) - [Examining options for FX hedging](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286789264.md) - [02:45 ETTrade Nation Co-Founds The Bahamas Institute of Forex and CFD Issuers to Support Industry Collaboration](https://longbridge.com/en/news/287170093.md)