"Worst Case Scenario" Looms As Merkel's "Jamaica Coalition" Collapses
20
November, 2017
We warned
on Friday that
German Chancellor Angela Merkel faced a 'night of the long knives' in
her efforts to bring together the co-called 'Jamaica' coalition of
four parties and after a desperate weekend of talks, Bloomberg
reports Merkel's
efforts at forming a coalition have failed meaning a second election
looms and sending the euro sliding.
As
Bloomberg reports, talks on forming German Chancellor Angela
Merkel’s next government collapsed, throwing
the future of Europe’s longest-serving leader into doubt and
potentially pointing the world’s fourth-biggest economy toward new
elections.
After
a 12-hour negotiating session that ended shortly before midnight
Sunday, the
Free Democratic Party walked out of the exploratory talks, saying the
differences with the Green party were too great to bridge.
Merkel
has sought for four weeks to enlist the two smaller parties for her
fourth-term coalition.
“It’s better not to govern than to govern badly,” FDP head Christian Lindner told reporters in Berlin.
No
further coalition talks were scheduled, he said. There was no
immediate comment from Merkel.
EURUSD
is down aroound 80 pips on the news...
As
MINT Partners' Bill Blain noted previously, Germans
are not used to multiple elections – and a second vote early next
year would be massive negative for Merkel herself –
she may even have to stand down if coalition looks like falling. That
could be massive shock.
As
a result, the prospects for more volatile European peripheral
markets, particularly Greece and Italy, are likely to be
exacerbated, and we
might well see some of the currency and European stock market froth
blow away in coming days as the scale of the “German Problem”
becomes clearer.
- My worst case Germany scenario is a second election early next year, political uncertainty as Mutti Merkel finds herself squeezed out, and a scramble to build a new coalition government in her aftermath.
- The best case scenario isn’t much better: that Merkel manages to forge a new coalition, but it will be a long drawn out affair and the resulting administration will be vulnerable, weak and fraxious.
These
sound like German problems, but they
mean the “leader of Europe” is likely to be entirely inward
focused in coming months/years.. at a time when the European union
will be facing a host of new issues regarding closer union, banking
union and reform of the ESM, bailout and QE policies.
There will also be new potential crisis points – Italian elections
next year, Greece bailout, renewed immigration crisis or a blow-up
with Trump. And these are just the known unknowns.
This
has profound implications for the so-called French/German axis as it
slides towards Paris. We
are not going to see a new German government “waste time” on
issues like closer EU union, European Banking Union, or critical
finance issues like reforming ESM or new approaches on QE and Bailout
funds. Forget Wiedemann for ECB president, it’s more likely to
another Frenchman (Trichet II) – I’m sure its already underway.
In short.. Germany negotiations could get very fraxious while Europe
is dragged down in its wake. I doubt the markets have discounted it
yet.
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