EU Debt Issue Suddenly Back From The Dead

 | Jul 11, 2014 06:09AM ET

Recent developments in EU peripheral spreads, a long forgotten indicator, show that “convergence trade” is over and done with, as Portuguese, Spanish and Italian rates have moved stealthily higher relative to their German counterparts in recent weeks. This is a direct challenge to European Central Bank Governor Mario Draghi’s OMT confidence game, which is precisely that, as he merely said in 2012 that he would do whatever it takes without really doing anything.

The market chose to believe him and took care of things itself, but these latest developments suggest that the confidence game may be up. Yesterday’s deepening concern about the Portuguese bank Banco Espirito Santo saw Portugal’s debt in particular blowing out sharply wider. Remember that we still don’t have debt mutualisation in the EU and that the sovereign market is still extremely vulnerable should investors take flight.

This would require a quick response from the European Central Bank and raise the prospect of political wrangling again as deepening ECB action quickly becomes political. Is the “EU situation” suddenly back from the dead? I think it may be. And if so, EURJPY will be a prominent focus for high beta ways to look for further Euro weakness.

10-year EU sovereign yield spread to Germany

Note that the peripheral sovereign spreads had actually been widening stealthily for some time before yesterday’s blow out in the Portugal/core spread. There is still no credible answer on how Club Med will be able to draw down its unsustainable debt load.