S&P upgrades Türkiye's credit rating, keeps outlook positive
This photo shows 55 Water Street, home of Standard & Poor's, in New York, Oct. 9, 2011. (AP File Photo)


The credit rating agency Standard & Poor's (S&P) upgraded Türkiye's credit rating from B to B+ and kept its outlook positive.

According to a press release from the agency on Friday, Türkiye is expected to improve coordination between monetary, fiscal, and income policies, amid external rebalancing.

"We forecast rising portfolio inflows and narrowing current account deficits over the next two years, alongside declining inflation and dollarization, although progress will be slow and reserve accumulation modest as the central bank limits depreciation of the Turkish lira," the agency said.

It also revised up transfer and convertibility assessment to "BB-" from "B+", saying that the risk of the sovereign preventing private-sector debtors from servicing foreign currency-denominated debt is abating.

"We could raise the rating further should balance-of-payments outcomes continue to improve, inflation decline, and domestic savings in Turkish lira rise, leading to a rebuilding of the government's usable foreign currency reserves," it added.