Right
Wingers In Europe Just Fired Off Two Huge Torpedoes
22
April, 2012
The
big news out of the French election: Marine Le-Pen, the head of the
far right wing National Front party, secured 20 percent of the vote
in the first round of voting.
Le-Pen
is now out of the race (the runoff on May 6 will be between Sarkozy
and Socialist challenger Hollande), but a 20 percent showing for the
anti-immigration, Euroskeptic candidate is a lightning bolt for
France and all of Europe.
Sarkozy
is now in a desperate situation, where he may have to pander to
hardliners in order to win (a move that could alienate more moderate
voters).
The
other big event in Europe this weekend was in the Netherlands, where
a budget deal collapsed thanks to a revolt led by another right
winger: Geert Wilders.
From
AFP:
The
breakdown after seven weeks of talks on austerity measures between
Premier Mark Rutte's ruling coalition and Wilders' eurosceptic,
anti-Islamist Freedom Party (PVV) has destabilized the political
scene.
Wilders
walked out of the talks on Saturday saying his party "could not
live up to" European Union demands, arguing that the cuts aimed
at steering The Netherlands back within EU deficit targets would hit
the elderly the hardest.
So
the Netherlands, a country nobody was talking about, is now without a
budget, and without a government. Elections will have to be called
soon after the coalition breakdown. UPDATE: Rutte is to offer his
resignation.
There's
something that's worth noting, which is that far-right wing parties
in Europe frequently have a tinge of economic liberalism to them. As
stated above, Wilders' party opposed cuts due to the impact on the
elderly. Le Pen's solution would be for France to abandon the Euro
(eventually) and monetize its debt through its own currency.
Core
Europe has been worried for some time that an election in a
peripheral country would produce a result that was anti-Euro. However
the latest developments show strength for anti-Euro candidates in
core countries.
Spain,
Italy, France And Germany Are Getting CRUSHED
22
April, 2012
In
the first day of trading after the big weekend for right-wingers in
Europe, Euro markets are getting... crushed.
Spain
is off 2.8%.
Italy
is off 2.1%.
France
is off 2,2%.
Germany
is off 1.9%.
US
is looking very ugly today, as well.
Of
course, in addition to the big result for Marine Le-Pen in the French
election, you also had the government collapse in the Netherlands,
thanks to the protest of right-wing politician Geert Wilders.
It
was a down night in Asia, as well. China fell 0.76% after another
sub-50 Flash PMI report. Japan and Korea registered tiny losses.
Also
not helping this morning: Ugly Flash PMI data for the Eurozone and
confirmation from the Bank of Spain that Spain has indeed re-entered
recession.
America
Awakes To Sea Of European Red As Hopium Hangover Hits
22
April, 2012
If
last week was Europe's days of hope, even as the continent was again
breaking, predicated by the utterly ridiculous such as a successful
Bill auction, a weak Spanish Bond issue, somehow spun by the
propaganda crew as good despite pricing at an utterly unsustainable
interest rate, and various German confidence indicators which soared
to multi-year highs, today is the bitter hangover. Where to start...
First
we got French and German PMIs which were nothing short of abysmal:
the France Services PMI fell to 46.4, or in fresh contraction
territory from March's 50.1, a 6-month low, even as the Manufacturing
PMI remained virtually unchanged at 47.3 compared to 46.7 in March.
All this of course adds insult to last night's Hollade victory injury
for capital markets which certainly are not happy with the
forthcoming change. But if France was ugly, Germany was downright
abysmal with the composite PMI back down to 50.9 from 51.6 in March,
dragged down by the Manufacturing PMI which hit a 33-month low of
46.3 (from 48.4 in March)! But, but, the Ifo and Zew... The end
result- Eurozone April Manufacturing PMI slumped to 46 vs 48.1 Est.
while the Services PMI dropped to 47.9 vs 49.3 est, with the
Employment Index sliding to 48.3 fro 49.2 in Marc - the lowest since
Feb 2010. In short, the quadruple dip didn't take long. But wait
there's more: the Italian Consumer Confidence number printed at 89
the lowest since the series began in 1996, falling to 89.0 from a
revised 96.3. Did we say falling, we meant imploding. But wait
there's more. The Bank of Spain just announced that Spanish GDP fell
0.4% in Q1, confirming that the country has entered into a recession.
But wait there's more. Eurostat just reported that Euro Zone govt
debt-to-GDP ratio rose to a record 87.2% in 2011 from 2010's 85.3%
revised from 85.4%; there was a silver lining - the deficit narrowed
to 4.1% of GDP v 6.2%, yet exchanging record debt for a modest drop
in deficits is hardly equitable. But wait there's more. As of minutes
ago, the Dutch Cabinet and PM has formally offered its resignation to
the queen, on the backdrop of this weekend's
stunning news, which in turn means that the country's AAA rating
is about to be slashed as first Citi and then the rating agencies
warned, confirming that the contagion has spread not only to Spain
and Italy (whose banks are about to be serially halted) but the core
once again.
Yet
while a lot of the above is noise, the big issue is that the European
growth dynamo, Germany, has now definitively stalled.
End
result: total bloodbath across all bond and equity markets as
follows:
- Spain 10 Years: +6.1 bps
- Italy 10 Years: +8.9 bps
- Netherlands 10 Years: +10.6 bps
- France 10 Years: +3.1 bps
- Netherlands CDS: +10 bps, at 129 and just shy of the all time wide of 136 bps. If the country is downgrade from AAA, which it will be shortly, that level will not hold. Italian banks are about to start being halted down with Intesa and Unicredit as usual first, even as the FTSI MIB is now down 7.5% YTD. How long until the short selling ban is reinstated?
- S&P 500 futures down 0.96% to 1362
- Stoxx 600 down 1.79% to 253.17
- US 10Yr yield down 3bps to 1.93%
- German 10Yr yield down 4bps to 1.67%
- MSCI Asia Pacific down 0.55% to 123.53
- Gold spot down 0.57% to $1633.62/oz
Needless
to say, US equity futures are exhibitingn a very peculiar shade of
green.
Finally,
as we will show shortly, Europe's daily bond auction calendar is once
again the buyside's favorite topic. And this week will be both busy
and ugly.
Perhaps
it is time for yet another IMF panhandling crusade, which somehow
makes a failure to get the needed $600 billion in guarantees,
procuring only $430billion, into a success.
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