Germany's Sept election and why it matters to markets
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[August 25, 2021]
By Dhara Ranasinghe and Yoruk Bahceli
LONDON (Reuters) - A momentous German
election marking the end of Angela Merkel's 16 years as chancellor is
less than a month away and with no clear outcome in sight, markets may
start to pay attention.
Germany's centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) have taken a poll lead over
Merkel's conservative Christian Democrats (CDU) for the first time in 15
years this week.
Uncertainty has also crept up as the Greens, previously tipped to be the
leading party in a coalition with the CDU/CSU bloc, ceded ground in the
polls, while approval ratings for CDU leader Armin Laschet have plunged.
The election could yield a "Jamaica" coalition of the CDU/CSU, Greens,
and the business-friendly Free Democrats (FDP). Or Europe's largest
economy could get a "traffic light" coalition, led by Finance Minister
Olaf Scholz's SPD, with the left-leaning Greens and the FDP as junior
partners.
The terms reflect the symbolic colours of the parties - black for CDU/CSU,
yellow for FDP, green for the Greens and red for SPD.
German elections rarely make market waves but the range of possible
outcomes is wider than in the past, said Berenberg chief economist
Holger Schmieding, who sees the shift towards the SPD as "modestly
negative for markets" because it raises the risk of protracted
uncertainty.
"For the first time this year, polls suggest that a two-way coalition
between the CDU/CSU and the Greens would be narrowly short of a majority
of seat," Schmieding said.
Here are some potential market implications:
1) AUSTERITY IS HISTORY?
The pandemic forced Germany to reverse long-observed fiscal restraint
and focus initially had been on whether the Greens could make that
change permanent as they had led the polls. The party pledges spending
increases and reform to a debt brake which limits new federal borrowing
to just 0.35% of GDP.
"In general, across all parties, maybe with the exception of the
Liberals, there is a tendency to give the government a little bit more
(fiscal) leeway," said Joern Wasmund, global head of fixed income at DWS.
Structurally higher spending and borrowing would lift bond yields, and
by potentially improving economic growth prospects, also the euro. But
the CDU or the FDP, which will almost certainly join any coalition, want
to reinstate the debt brake.
"My bet is there is a chance of 70% that the CDU-CSU will be part of the
next German coalition, which means we won't see a major change in terms
of fiscal spending," said Christopher Dembik, head of macro analysis at
Saxo Bank.
Ditching the constitutionally-enshrined debt brake also becomes
unlikely, as that requires a two-thirds parliamentary majority.
But yields will not necessarily fall.
Some in the CDU/CSU are open to additional spending with the debt brake.
That could generate some 100 billion euros ($117.54 billion) of
infrastructure and environmental spending - 3% of 2019 GDP - over the
next four years, ING's head of global macro Carsten Brzeski says.
2) REGULATION RISKS
A leftist Greens/SPD/Left Party coalition would raise the risk of
tighter regulation to 20% from 15%, Berenberg's Schmieding estimates.
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SPD Chancellor candidate Olaf Scholz looks on after an event to kick
off his campaign, in Bochum, Germany, August 14, 2021. REUTERS/Leon
Kuegeler/Pool
"Whereas tighter regulations of labour, service and
housing markets would not have a major impact on the short-term
business cycle, they could turn into a serious drag on German trend
growth over time. This is the tail risk to watch."
Goldman Sachs analysts reckon a left-wing coalition
could lift Bund yields about 10 basis points.
3/ CLOSING THE GAP
A coalition including the Greens and the SPD may narrow the spread
between German borrowing costs and those of weaker euro zone states,
given these parties' support for further European integration.
The FDP and the CDU meanwhile oppose a euro zone fiscal union and
want a return to stricter EU budget rules.
Wasmund of DWS said however that none of the likely coalitions would
bring about radical change.
"Particularly, the commitment towards the European Union will stay
as it is," he added.
4/ ALL GREEN
Climate policy is a priority for all the parties but they differ in
the way to achieve the goals, said Barbara Boettcher, head of
European policy research at Deutsche Bank.
"The CDU and FDP put the emphasis on market instruments and
technology driven solutions whereas the Greens prefer more
regulation," Boettcher said.
The Greens favour hiking emissions taxes, cutting carbon emissions
by 70% and targeting 100% renewable energy by 2030.
Wind and solar power companies should benefit alongside the auto
sector, which is trying to challenge electric vehicle leader Tesla.
5/FOREIGN POLICY
The Greens and FDP call for a tougher approach towards China and
Russia, and there are signs the stance of CDU chancellor candidate
Laschet has moved closer to theirs.
Laschet has described China as a rival and recently said Germany
could stop gas flowing through the Nord Stream 2 pipeline from
Russia if Moscow breaks arrangement terms or uses it to pressure
Ukraine.
"This move will make negotiations on foreign policy easier in a
potential Jamaica coalition," Eurasia Group's Naz Masraff said.
($1 = 0.8508 euros)
(Reporting by Dhara Ranasinghe and Yoruk Bahceli; Editing by Sujata
Rao and Tomasz Janowski)
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