Euro and French markets roiled by shock Macron election call
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[June 10, 2024] By
Dhara Ranasinghe and Amanda Cooper
LONDON/SINGAPORE (Reuters) -The euro tumbled, while French bonds and
stocks were hit hard on Monday, following French President Emmanuel
Macron's decision to call a snap parliamentary election after being
trounced in a European Union vote by the far right.
The euro fell 0.5% to a one-month low of $1.0764 and slumped to a
21-month trough against sterling of 84.53 pence.
French blue-chip stocks dropped 2%, led by steep losses in the likes of
lenders such as BNP Paribas and Societe Generale, making the CAC 40 the
worst-performing index in Europe. Europe's benchmark STOXX 600 fell
0.7%.
French government bond prices also fell, pushing 10-year yields close to
their highest this year, at around 3.19%. Centre, liberal and Socialist
parties were set to retain a majority after the European Parliament
elections, but euroskeptic nationalists made the biggest gains, raising
questions about the ability of major powers to drive policy in the bloc.
Making a risky gamble to reestablish authority, Macron called a
parliamentary election with a first round on June 30.
If the far-right National Rally party wins a majority, Macron would be
left without a say in domestic affairs.
"That is probably somewhat bad news for markets," said Berenberg chief
economist Holger Schmieding.
"It introduces an unexpected element of uncertainty."
Britain holds a general election on July 4 and crucial U.S. elections
take place in November, while markets have lately turned fragile as U.S.
rate cut expectations have dimmed.
Kathleen Brooks, research director at trading platform XTB, said in a
note the "shock factor" from Macron's decision to call a snap election
would weigh on European markets on Monday, but who prevailed in the
actual vote might carry more weight.
"The question for traders of the euro and European stock markets is just
how radical will Marine Le Pen and Jordan Bardella be if they do well in
the French parliamentary elections?" she said, referring to two
far-right leaders in France.
WAKE-UP CALL?
While the euro and euro area assets have been largely cushioned by
diminished euroskepticism compared with elections in the 2010s and early
2020s, the results and surprise reaction from France could be a wake-up
call.
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A shopper pays with a ten Euro bank note at a local market in Nice,
France, June 7, 2022. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard/File Photo
The premium bond investors demand to hold French government debt,
rather than benchmark German bonds, touched its highest in six
weeks, widening by 5 basis points (bps) to 53.47 bps.
The gap between German and Italian debt, which investors see as a
measure of risk appetite in the broader region, also widened to
138.6 bps, the most since late April.
"Obviously, the snap election is a new source of uncertainty, which
should have some negative impact on economic and market confidence,
at least in France," said Jan von Gerich, chief market analyst at
Nordea.
But he noted that EU election results do not always translate into
domestic ones, due to different voting systems and as EU elections
tend to attract a larger protest vote.
That said, shares in French banks were battered, with Societe
Generale falling almost 7%, while BNP Paribas was down nearly 5% as
investors worried their funding costs may increase if French
sovereign borrowing becomes more expensive amid higher spending,
bankers said.
The cost of insuring the debt of both banks against default rose to
around its highest in a month, according to data from S&P Global
Market Intelligence.
The European Central Bank last week delivered its first rate cut in
five years and the currency is down almost 2.5% on the dollar this
year, mostly driven by the relative outlooks for interest rate cuts
in the euro area and United States.
In France, where concerns about the country's high debt levels have
grown this year, the implications of renewed political uncertainty
for the economy could also be in focus.
Standard & Poor's last month cut its rating on France's sovereign
debt, delivering a painful rebuke to the government's handling of
the strained budget days before the EU election.
(Additional reporting by Mathieu Rosemain in Paris; Ankur Banerjee
and Tom Westbrook in Singapore and Stephen Culp in New York; Editing
by Shri Navaratnam and Mark Potter, Kirsten Donovan)
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