Bad news for the European Union coming from Spain too, not just Italy

Aurel Dragan 30/05/2018 | 13:32

Italy is still in crisis and like this is not enough there are bad news coming from Spain, where a crisis is brewing and the Prime Minister is facing a confidence vote this Friday. An it is not the only bad news, other coming from Turkey, where European banks have a significant financial exposure. 

The situation in Italy remains tense after President Mattarella appointed Carlo Cottarelli (a former IMF official, of all things), intensifying populist anger. Fresh polls suggest new elections could result in a strengthened result for the two populist parties, who can leverage popular outrage at financial considerations directly linked to the euro, i.e., credit spreads specifically referred to by Mattarella in his rejection of the finance minister choice Savona. The EU elite has a tall task in coming up with a plan that can convince Italian voters to alter their choice at the next election round, set for September at the earliest.

”As if the situation in Italy wasn’t bad enough, a Spanish political crisis has been brewing and Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy faces a confidence vote this Friday. His People’s Party has been struggling in the polls after a recent political scandal that saw convictions of PP members. The situation does not directly parallel Italy’s, as the chief benefactor in the polls has been Ciudadanos, a semi-nationalist liberal party with no major euro-skeptic angle to its platform. Still, the situation in Spain isn’t helping,” said John J Hardy, head of FX at Saxo Bank.

In further EU news, the EU is clearly shifting is funding priorities as it pulls funds away from the CEE periphery and reallocates these to the southern periphery. The FT leads with a story on this morning, as Greece is in for the maximum allowable eight percent increase in funding (a reward for good behaviour it seems) and Spain, Portugal and Italy also seeing significant increases, while Hungary, Czech Republic, Estonia and Lithuania will all see the maximum 24% cuts to their funding allocations this year. CEE currencies have come under considerable pressure even versus a weak euro during this latest round of EU existential worries.

Finally, the situation in Turkey represents a financial risk to EU banks, who have significant loan exposure to Turkish banks. The Turkish central bank move to simplify its complex of interest rates this week was hailed as an improvement and TRY had a solid session yesterday, but the key is the signalling from Erdogan as he is set to become an even more powerful president after the June 24 elections expand the executive power of that office.

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