Political pitfalls to test markets' comfort over French election
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[April 20, 2022]
By Leigh Thomas and Dhara Ranasinghe
PARIS (Reuters) - Financial markets are
more sanguine about France's presidential election than they were five
years ago, even though political risks are higher now no matter who
wins.
Far-right leader Marine Le Pen has never been closer to power even
though polls suggest incumbent Emmanuel Macron will win a second term in
Sunday's runoff vote against her, although by a much smaller margin than
in 2017.
Even if Macron defeats Le Pen, he cannot count on easily winning a new
majority in June parliamentary elections. Le Pen also cannot expect a
parliamentary majority, but her victory could trigger constitutional and
institutional crises.
Nonetheless, financial markets are more relaxed this time with the
premium investors demand to own French bonds over the German benchmark
now at 45 basis points, well below the 75 bps seen in 2017. The euro,
trading at $1.0860, is above levels seen in the run-up to the 2017 vote.
"The big difference this time is that Le Pen has softened her anti-EU
and anti-euro rhetoric, which is what spooked markets so much last time
around," said Mike Riddell, head of macro unconstrained at Allianz
Global Investors in London.
Though she has toned down her campaigning, there is no shortage of
initiatives that could put a president Le Pen on a collision course with
Paris' EU partners and France's courts.
Promises to scrap income tax on under 30-year-olds or impose a "national
preference" for French citizens to receive welfare, benefits, social
housing and even jobs could fall foul of the constitutional court.
Costly plans to nationalise motorways and cut value added tax on energy
would weigh heavily on the budget deficit, leaving little chance of it
falling below 5% of GDP in the medium term - well above the European
Union's 3% ceiling, Societe Generale said.
"Such an increase in deficits and debt would undoubtedly lead to
tensions with the EU," the French bank's analysts said in a research
note.
Endorsing Macron for a new five-year term, the MEDEF employers'
federation said that France would fall behind its neighbours under Le
Pen and become marginalised in the EU.
"The big and unfinanced increase in public spending risks putting the
country in an impasse," the MEDEF warned after the first round of
voting.
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Official campaign posters of French President and centrist LREM
party candidate for re-election Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen,
leader of French far-right National Rally (Rassemblement National)
party, are displayed at France Affichage Plus dispatch hub in
Mitry-Mory, outside Paris, France, France, April 13, 2022.
REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS
No matter who wins the presidential election, victory could prove
short-lived with legislative elections in June key to whether the
president has enough leeway to govern effectively.
Political scientist Martial Foucault, whose Cevipof institute leads
the largest poll on the presidential election, said that Le Pen
simply could not field enough viable candidates to win an absolute
majority.
That would leave her with few choices other than to try to find a
prime minister capable of governing with an "impossible coalition",
he said.
But even if Macron is re-elected president, he too will likely
struggle to secure a viable majority without relying on support from
fickle allies. '
"If he doesn't get a majority in the parliamentary election, that is
also problematic," said Francois Savary, chief investment officer at
Swiss wealth management firm Prime Partners.
"So the question about paralysis is not just about Le Pen but also
connected to the parliamentary election, which could be key and
impose restrictions on Macron too."
Macron can expect fierce opposition from the camp of hard-left
presidential candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon, who showed he has support
from a sizeable block of voters when he came in third in a first
round of the presidential vote, just behind Le Pen.
At home, a fragile political base would spell trouble for Macron's
plans to pass an unpopular overhaul of the pension system while
internationally it would weaken his hand for broader European
initiatives, said Carmignac investment committee member Kevin Thozet.
That makes the outcome of the legislative elections almost as
important as who wins the presidency.
"Once April 24th is over, investors should certainly and very
quickly follow very closely this 'third round' of the French
presidential election," Thozet said.
(Reporting by Dhara Ranasinghe in London and Leigh Thomas in Paris;
Editing by Nick Macfie)
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