6 February 2018
Client Alert | Turkey | Banking & Finance
In November 2017, the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey announced that restraining measures were being considered in order to curb USD 200 billion of f/x debt owed by Turkish companies. After having collected and analysed details of the f/x debt of 110 Turkish companies which represents roughly 23% of the total Turkish private sector f/x debts, Decree No. 32 on the Protection of the Value of Turkish Currency ("Decree No. 32") was amended in order to ease the credit burden on Turkish banks and Turkish companies and to stem the weakening of Turkish lira against f/x currencies. The amendments were announced in Official Gazette No. 30312 from 25 January 2018, and will enter into force on 2 May 2018. In this context, the most significant principles of the new amendments may be outlined as follows:
This client alert aims to briefly summarise the requirements set out under the recent changes brought to Decree No 32, and to provide some insight about the new currency regime regarding foreign currency denominated loans:
(i) "f/x income" means "receivables obtained from exports, transit trade, sales and deliveries that which are deemed to be exports, as determined by the relevant legislation and foreign exchange earning services and activities"; and
(ii) "Credit balance" means the "total amount of unpaid cash f/x loan debts obtained domestically (within the country) and from abroad."
(i) Loans to be used by public institutions, Turkish banks, leasing companies, factoring companies and financing companies.
(ii) Turkish residents with a credit balance of more than USD 15 million on the utilisation date.
(iii) F/x loans to be used by Turkish residents within the framework of an investment incentive certificate.
(iv) F/x loans to be used in order to finance machinery and equipment whose HS Codes are indicated by reference in Annex (I) of Decree No. 2007/13033 determining the Value Added Tax Rate Applicable to the Goods and Services. This exception also applies to domestic financial lease operations performed in a foreign currency.
(v) F/x loans to be used by Turkish residents who win domestic public tenders announced on an international scale, or Turkish residents undertaking defence industry projects approved by the Undersecretariat of the Defence Industry.
(vi) F/x loans to be used by Turkish resident-contractors of PPP projects.
(vii) Turkish residents who do not have any f/x income in the past three years are also allowed to use f/x loans up to the amount of their potential f/x income, provided that they demonstrate their relationship/link with exports, transit trade, sales and deliveries that are deemed to be exports, as well as foreign exchange earning services and activities and their potential f/x income.
(viii) F/x loans to be obtained by Turkish residents in accordance with the principles to be determined by the Prime Ministry (to which the Undersecretariat of Treasury is attached).
(ix) F/x loans obtained domestically, to be used by Turkish residents up to the amount of foreign exchange deposited as collateral in the domestic branches of banks, or up to the amount of f/x securities issued by central governments and central banks of OECD member countries.
Long-awaited changes are provided as a main tool for the limitation of f/x debts of Turkish companies. However, there is some secondary legislation introducing the details of the legal process and implementing these changes that is still expected by the Turkish banking sector.