One of the most notable developments in international financial markets recently has been JPMorgan’s decision to downgrade its recommendation on Turkish corporate credit from Overweight to Neutral.
The bank is not abandoning Turkey altogether. Rather, it is becoming significantly more selective, focusing primarily on shorter-duration bonds issued by higher-quality credits.
The market’s first reaction is often straightforward:
“Foreign investors are leaving Turkey.”
However, reality is far more nuanced.
The real question is:
Has Turkey become riskier, or has the risk-return equation simply changed?
1. The Story of the Last Two Years
Throughout 2024 and 2025, Turkey offered global investors a remarkably clear investment narrative:
Exceptionally high interest rates
A relatively stable exchange rate
Declining sovereign CDS spreads
Improving foreign reserve dynamics
A return to more orthodox monetary policies
This combination proved highly attractive, particularly for carry-trade investors.
Reports suggest that JPMorgan’s Turkish lira strategies generated returns approaching 55% over the past two years, prompting the bank to substantially reduce those positions. Viewed from this perspective, the recent adjustment should not be interpreted as:
“Turkey is deteriorating.”
Instead, it is better understood as:
“Strong gains have already been realized, and risks are now being repriced.”
2. Why Is JPMorgan Becoming More Cautious?
Several key risks stand out in the bank’s latest assessment.
Geopolitical Risks
Regional tensions involving Iran and the broader Middle East could affect Turkey through higher energy prices and weaker external demand. For an economy that remains structurally dependent on imported energy, any sustained increase in oil prices can quickly translate into macroeconomic pressure.
Inflation Risks
Higher energy costs can trigger a chain reaction:
A wider current account deficit
Rising production costs
Renewed inflationary pressures
Such developments could slow or even interrupt the ongoing disinflation process.
Political Uncertainty
Markets continue to monitor the possibility of an early election and potential pre-election fiscal stimulus measures. Whether these risks materialize or not, uncertainty itself affects investor positioning and risk appetite.
3. The Most Interesting Part of the Report
Ironically, the most important message in JPMorgan’s report is not what it says negatively. It is what it does not say. The bank is not forecasting a disorderly collapse of the Turkish lira. This is a crucial distinction. The base-case scenario among international investors still appears to be:
High interest rates + Slower growth + Managed currency stability
In other words, investors do not currently view Turkey as an Argentina-style scenario. At the same time, they no longer view it as comfortably as they did during much of 2024.
4. What Is the CDS Market Saying?
remains around the 238-basis-point level. While significantly lower than crisis-period peaks, it still indicates that investors are not ignoring risk altogether. The message from the market seems clear:
“Turkey remains investable, but it is no longer as cheap as it once was.”
That distinction matters.
Investors tend to tolerate risk when they are being compensated generously for it. As valuations improve and gains accumulate, the margin for error naturally narrows.
5. The Core Challenge: Confidence or Growth?
Turkey’s economic policy framework currently revolves around a fundamental trade-off.
Scenario A
High interest rates
Slower growth
Currency stability
Scenario B
Faster growth
Lower interest rates
Greater currency volatility
At present, markets continue to price Scenario A as the dominant path. However, as political timelines evolve and growth concerns intensify, investors will increasingly assess the probability of a shift toward Scenario B. The balance between these two paths may ultimately determine the trajectory of Turkish assets over the next 12 months.
Conclusion
JPMorgan’s latest decision should not be interpreted as an exit from Turkey. Rather, it reflects a transition from an aggressive positioning strategy to a more defensive and selective approach. Foreign investors are not leaving the field. But they are no longer playing in attack mode. They are moving closer to defense.
The central question facing Turkey today is therefore straightforward:
Can the credibility gained through tight monetary policy be preserved, or will growth pressures eventually challenge that equilibrium?
The answer will shape not only the future of the Turkish lira, but also the direction of CDS spreads, bond yields, capital inflows, and Turkey’s broader standing within global emerging markets.
Deep Diver Insights:
“Risk is not disappearing. It is simply being repriced.”





















