Monday, December 16, 2024

Analysis-Bond vigilantes spare France for now, but political crisis will bring more pain

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By Yoruk Bahceli and Leigh Thomas

LONDON/PARIS (Reuters) – Bond investors are likely to spare France the dire financial “storm” Prime Minister Michel Barnier has warned of, but the fallout from the political crisis will hurt businesses, consumers and taxpayers.

Barnier’s government looks all but certain to fall as soon as Wednesday with Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally planning to topple it after a dispute over his 60 billion-euro ($63 billion) belt-tightening budget aimed at curbing a budget deficit double the European Union’s limit.

Market moves have been significant. The euro zone’s second-largest economy briefly paid higher yields on its government bonds on Monday than previously bailed-out Greece.

Its closely watched risk premium, or spread, over Germany rose to 90 basis points (bps) last week, the highest since 2012, another throwback to the bloc’s debt crisis.

All this has renewed talk of the return of bond vigilantes, who demand higher returns from governments they perceive as fiscally reckless.

Yet big investors see the latest upheaval as the next episode in a long-winded reckoning rather than a budget-driven market meltdown of the sort Britain went through in 2022.

“This is a slow burning crisis which will lead to an ongoing widening of spreads and an ongoing deterioration of sovereign creditworthiness,” said Union Investment’s head of fixed income and FX Christian Kopf.

“But for the time being, I do not see the ingredients for this to totally get out of hand and morph into an outright sovereign debt crisis,” said Kopf, who is underweight French debt.

Signalling that French markets are set for more pain first, investors expect the spread could rise to around 100 bps were Barnier’s government to collapse, spelling the end for its belt-tightening plans. That would mean investors rank France increasingly on a par with Italy.

Without Barnier’s measures, France’s Treasury has estimated the budget deficit could reach 7% of economic output next year rather than the 5% targeted.

But whether that requires an immediate rethink on the country’s debt sustainability is another matter.

French borrowing costs have dropped despite heightened uncertainty over the last two weeks, helped by European Central Bank rate cut expectations. The 10-year yield is down over 20 bps since President Emmanuel Macron called a snap election in June.

“There is no snowball effect of higher yields driving greater concerns about debt sustainability,” said Chris Jeffery, head of macro strategy at Legal & General Investment Management, sticking to his overweight position in French bonds with much bad news priced in.

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