Italy Crisis Pounds EUR, More To Come

 | May 29, 2018 06:10AM ET

Tuesday May 29: Five things the markets are talking about

Threat of Euro fragmentation

US Treasuries have rallied alongside a number of core-European bonds as the political crisis in Italy and Spain deepens, triggering risk-off trading across capital markets.

The EUR ($1.1512) has tested fresh 11-month lows outright in early Euro trading after Italy’s president scuttled an attempt by a coalition of Italian anti-establishment parties to form a government. With fresh elections appearing increasingly likely, investors should expect the Five Star and the League to campaign on the idea that they were denied the “right to govern,” possibly resulting in a stronger populist sentiment at the next election. This would certainly pose risks to the European integration France and Germany are campaigning for.

Note: An Italian election would resemble a referendum, de facto, on the EU and the single unit.

Meanwhile in Spain, parliament is set to vote Friday (June 1) whether to oust Prime Minister Rajoy and replace his center-right government with one led by the center-left Socialist Party after a Spanish court ruled that Mr. Rajoy’s Popular Party financially benefited from an illegal kickback scheme.

On tap: US CB consumer confidence at 10 am EDT.

1. Global equities extend losses on geopolitical concerns

In Japan, stocks fell to one-month lows overnight, with investors selling cyclical shares as concerns over European politics added to the list of reasons to be cautious about the global economic outlook. The Nikkei average dropped -0.5%, the lowest close in four-weeks, while the broader Topix fell -0.48%.

Down-under, the Aussie shares ended higher on Tuesday, lifted by financials, though gains were capped by declines for consumer and telecom stocks. The S&P/ASX 200 index closed +0.2% higher. The benchmark declined -0.5% on Monday. In S. Korea, the KOSPI also came under pressure closing down -0.9%.

In Hong Kong, stocks ended lower, led by financials, as risk appetite was curbed by market volatility in Europe. The Hang Seng index ended -1% lower, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) closed -1.3%.

In China, stocks posted a fifth consecutive session of losses overnight, as investors become concerned about credit risks amid more bond defaults. The blue-chip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index fell -0.8%, while the Shanghai Composite Index closed down -0.5%.

In Europe, regional bourses open down across the board and have continued the trend as the session progresses. Declines in benchmark US and German bond yields combined with continued uncertainty about regional politics is again put pressure on European bank shares.

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US stocks are set to open deep in the ‘red’ (-0.7%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -1.8% at 3,424, FTSE -1.4% at 7,623, DAX -1.5% at 12,666, CAC 40 -1.6% at 5,421; IBEX 35 -2.2% at 9,543, FTSE MIB -2.4% at 21,423, SMI -1.2% at 8,669, S&P 500 Futures -0.7%