What election? French
yields fall, euro steadies as vote looms
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[April 21, 2017]
By Jemima Kelly
LONDON
(Reuters) - Global markets appeared largely calm on Friday, the last day
of trading before the first round of France's closely fought
presidential election, with French bond yields hitting a three-month low
and the euro treading water.
A fatal attack on police officers in Paris overnight caused investors
some immediate jitters, with the gap between French and German 10-year
borrowing costs -- a key indicator of election nerves in recent months
-- rising sharply in the first few minutes of trading.
Traders said this was on concern the attack could sway the vote in favor
of far-right anti-immigrant candidate Marine Le Pen, whose anti-European
Union stance is of concern o many in the markets.
But that move reversed as the session wore on, with the yield on 10-year
French government debt hitting its weakest since mid-January and the gap
between it and its German equivalent falling to its tightest in three
weeks.
Although falling yields usually indicate investors seeking safety, in
the case of the election uncertainty lower French yields imply a more
steady-as-she-goes approach to the future.
Investors seem relatively confident that while Le Pen might well win
enough votes on Sunday to make the second round on May 7, she will then
be comfortably beaten, probably by the market-friendly, centrist
candidate Emmanuel Macron.
Having hit a three-week high close just below $1.08 earlier in the week,
the euro was flat at $1.0717.
European stocks edged down a touch, with the pan-European STOXX 600
index down 0.1 percent by 0910 GMT.
"So far markets have been pretty sanguine in the face of the (French)
presidential election, which was flagged as one of the potential banana
skins for markets in this year and I think that may be partly a result
of political fatigue," said Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Laith Khalaf, in
London.
But options markets <EURVOL=> suggested investors remain worried about
strong results for Le Pen and/or hard-left challenger anti-EU Jean-Luc
Melenchon that would point to the risk of another major political shock
for Europe in two weeks time.
(For a graphic on Frech election, click http://tmsnrt.rs/2jLwO20)
"It is kind of reminiscent of the big events last year where people know
that it is a binary outcome so the best approach is to remain as
cautious as possible," said Simon Derrick, head of the global markets
research team at Bank of New York Mellon in London.
France's CAC stock index fell 0.9 percent, though it was only around 2
percent off its highest levels since mid-2015.
NERVES OF STEEL
Shares on Wall Street looked set to open marginally higher, with the
main indexes having closed between 0.75 percent and 0.9 percent higher
on rising expectations for first-quarter corporate profits.
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A combination picture shows five candidates for the French 2017
presidential election, from L-R, Francois Fillon, the Republicans
political party candidate, Benoit Hamon, French Socialist party
candidate, Marine Le Pen, French National Front (FN) political party
leader, Emmanuel Macron, head of the political movement En Marche !
(Onwards !), Jean-Luc Melenchon, candidate of the French far-left
Parti de Gauche, in Paris, France. REUTERS/Charles Platiau/File
Photo
Asian stocks ended the week on a positive note, unscathed by a U.S.
trade probe on Chinese steel exports. MSCI's broadest index of
Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan added 0.5 percent, but was down 0.4
percent on the week.
Asian steelmakers were mostly steady or higher, as investors dismissed
for now any negative impact from the launch of a U.S. trade probe
against Chinese steel exporters, although Chinese companies shed some of
their earlier gains. The move sent their U.S. counterparts surging over
8 percent overnight.
"The U.S. accounts for a small proportion of China's steel exports,"
said Yang Kunhe, steel analyst at Northeast Securities in Beijing,
adding Northeast Asia and Africa have been growing markets for Chinese
steel over the past few years.
"But if Trump’s probe translates into actions, it would increase the
chance of trade friction, and hurt market sentiment."
Markets also mostly shrugged off White House comments that the U.S. may
consider tit-for-tat tariffs on imports, and concerns raised by the
International Monetary Fund that U.S. tax cuts could fuel financial
risk-taking and increase public debt.
Japan's Nikkei advanced 1 percent, posting a weekly gain of 1.6 percent.
The safe-haven yen, which tends to move inversely to the Nikkei, was on
track for its worst week against the dollar in seven, down around half a
percent as nerves over geopolitical tensions have eased off a touch.
Chinese shares in Shanghai added 0.1 percent but recorded a 2.2 percent
weekly drop, their worst since mid-December.
In commodities, oil prices edged lower and were on course for the
biggest weekly drop in a month, over doubts that an OPEC-led production
cut will restore balance to an oversupplied market. [O/R]
Front-month Brent futures: were at $52.95 a barrel and set for a 5.2
percent weekly drop, the most since the week of March 10.
Gold was flat at $1,280.91 an ounce.
(Additional reporting by Kit Rees, Abhinav Ramnarayan, Marc Jones and
Patrick Graham in London, and Nichola Saminather, John Ruwitch, Samuel
Shen and Sadiq Iqbal Ahmed in Singapore)
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