Euro Down, But Not Out After Renzi Loss

 | Dec 05, 2016 06:49AM ET

Monday December 5: Five things the markets are talking about

Is there EMU turmoil on the horizon? The odds are beginning to stack up.

Italy’s pro-EU Renzi stood down as PM earlier this morning after his referendum for Italian constitutional change was resoundingly beaten by a record turnout Sunday. This has paved the way for another general election and the possibility of an anti-EU party win for the fourth largest economy in the eurozone.

There has been no early reaction from the European Commission to the news, with officials calling this a domestic Italian issue, and not a vote on the European Union. With national elections slated for the Netherlands, France, Germany and Italy next year will certainly keep the euro markets under pressure (overnight – EUR prints a 20-month low, periphery yields back up while bund prices rally).

Elsewhere, Austria chose a Pro-EU President in their elections on the weekend; the result was a rejection to the ‘populist’ Freedom Party. In New Zealand, PM John Key indicated that he will step down and will not seek reelection in 2017.

Aside from political uncertainty, this is a busy week on the monetary policy and data front. Four central banks will announce their rate decisions – Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), Reserve Bank of India (RBI), European Central Bank (ECB) and Bank of Canada (BoC). The Aussies post their Q3 GDP data, while composite and/or service PMI’s will be reported for Japan, China, India, Eurozone, France, Germany and the U.S.

1. Mixed equity response to Italy’s outcome

Being the first line of defense due to timing, Asian shares have taken the brunt of the pressure overnight; mostly declining amid concerns the result of the Italian referendum could trigger a selloff in Europe’s banking shares that would ripple worldwide.

Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average fell -0.8%, while stocks in Shanghai fell -1.2% and stocks in Hong Kong shed -0.5%.

In Europe, stock indexes are rallying in early trade as markets respond in a remarkably muted manner to Italian voters’ rejection of constitutional reform. Naturally, Italian bank stocks and government bonds are under pressure, but the bulk of the negativity for Italian equities, bonds and the euro seems to have been mostly priced in leading to the vote.

The Stoxx Europe 600 has rallied + 0.7%, while Italy’s FTSE MIB index fell -1.3%, led lower by the banking sector. The wider Euro Stoxx Banks Index is down -1.7%. Mining stocks are leading the gains in the FTSE 100, further supported by Brent and WTI which are trading sharply higher intraday.

U.S futures are set to open +0.5% higher.

Indices: Stoxx50 +1.5% at 3,063, FTSE +0.8% at 6,786, DAX +1.7% at 10,696, CAC 40 +1.4% at 4,594, IBEX 35 +1.3% at 8,716, FTSE MIB +0.4% at 17,157, SMI +1.2% at 7,874, S&P 500 Futures +0.5%

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