You Thought U.S. Politics Were Crazy? Take A Look At Italy

 | May 30, 2018 01:07AM ET

And you thought the U.S. political scene was wild and crazy. In Italy, over the weekend, the sitting President used his constitutional powers to block the creation of a legally elected government which already controls the Parliament. This will force new elections which will likely give the populist parties even more power and guarantee an even larger shift away from the EU. We will quickly need an Italian name for Brexit on steroids. And if you own assets in Italy, your portfolio is going to need something much stronger than steroids to keep it afloat. Meanwhile, the euro moves one step closer to becoming a broken currency that will only further benefit European manufacturing exports and tourism, while sending inflation straight up. Who is going to tell Merkel and Macron to cancel their summer vacation plans?

There is unfortunately much more to worry about globally. The U.S. steel tariffs expire this week and in another reversal, the Administration has now decided to implement tariffs on China. Speaking of which, has anyone seen the U.S. Treasury Secretary since last week when I suggested he had the upper hand in the Chinese trade negotiations? Since hitting the news shows on Monday, he has disappeared. Like completely. I was wrong to suggest that the White House was turning over a new leaf on the trade negotiations. It is clear that no one outside the Administration (or maybe even inside) has any knowledge as to what is being considered or implemented. Like the Colorado weather, just wait 6 hours and it can change wildly.

In other countries, the Turkish lira is trying to halt its steep slide, Brazil is feeling social unrest pressures from a soaring U.S. dollar, Argentina continues to see volatile investment flows and Spain is having its own Presidential political problems. All of these rising global tensions is creating a sudden flight to safety sending U.S. Treasuries, German Bunds, the yen and the Swiss franc sharply higher.

For a world, which two weeks ago was betting on rising U.S. rates and bonds breaking a 10-year trendline, this can be painful if you are not positioned correctly. One investor group on edge right now are the many U.S. equity portfolio managers who are overweight financial stocks. This sudden move lower in interest rates, coupled with an ever-flattening yield curve and now rising question marks on euro periphery assets, will place those positions at risk.

Also the soaring U.S. dollar will put pressure on their lending books exposed to U.S. exporters as Europe ramps up their factories. On the flip-side, U.S. Small Caps continue to remain in the driver seat as long as the U.S. economy holds together. So, hope you enjoyed the long weekend because it will be a long grind in the markets until the next three-day weekend in 14 weeks.

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Today’s spike in two-year Italian yields is outpacing anything seen during the euro-zone crisis in 2011 and 2012. The yield on two-year notes is up around 150 bps at 2.40%, having touched 2.83%, the highest level since 2012.

(@business)