How Unpredictable Will The Crack Heads Be About Italy?

 | Nov 23, 2016 12:11AM ET

Italy has a major referendum on December 4, the results of which could mark the start of an Italian exit… yet U.S. and most global stocks keep going up. They shot higher after a brief Brexit breakdown. They zoomed higher still after an even shorter Trump slump. Shock after shock is having no impact on markets. They just keep heading on up.

What do you think? Would a crack-addict be realistic about his or her chances of surviving a jump off a roof?

Polls are telling us that this referendum for constitutional reform by Prime Minister Renzi is likely to fail. “NO” is likely to win the day.

Of course, the polls haven’t exactly been a shining light of late… so we’ll see. But have you noticed how these events have tended to favor the far right and exit policies rather than the centrist and unifying parties?

Renzi has vowed to resign if “NO” takes the day and that opens the way for the far-right party to take over and move towards removing Italy from the euro and/or Eurozone, à la Brexit and Trump. And it’s the only way Italy can devalue, default, rebalance, and have a chance of coming out of its debt crisis – at the price of high short-term inflation, of course.

Right off the bat, they could default on their Target 2 loans, largely to Germany, of $344 billion. In total, the weaker Eurozone countries owe Germany $676 billion! So if Italy leaves the Eurozone, the impact would be way worse than anything we’ve seen (and will see) with Brexit.

The stock markets might have moved higher after Brexit and Trump… but what they’re missing is this…

They don’t yet appreciate that Brexit marked the beginning of a major anti-globalization movement that was seconded by the Trump victory. More importantly: Italy is the “death knell.”

Greece was bailed out because it was small enough and Germany and the European Central Bank (ECB) didn’t want to create a reaction of more euro exits in response if Greece was forced to exit.

But Italy isn’t small enough. In fact, it’s too big to fail… and to bail out. It’s the third largest country in the euro and the fourth largest in Europe. If it fails, all of Southern Europe will likely follow.

Italy’s stock market is already telescoping a major collapse in Italy, as is recent trends in its Sovereign bonds that have spiked a bit more than all the rest.

Look at Italy’s stock market index.