Opening Bell: Italian Referendum Fails; Will Euro, Markets Head Lower?

 | Dec 05, 2016 05:33AM ET

by Eli Wright

Though the results of Italy's much awaited constitutional referendum were no surprise, (polls actually got this one right), still Matteo Renzi's stinging defeat yesterday puts the Italian financial sector, and perhaps its future in the EU into question. As Renzi promised should the referendum not pass, he announced his intention to resign, which could happen as early as this afternoon in Italy.

Renzi's resignation could immediately trigger an Italian—and perhaps even Eurozone—banking crisis. As we wrote here on Thursday:

Italy is the eurozone’s third-largest economy, but the banking industry there is on precarious footing, currently grappling with over €200 billion in non-performing debt (from approximately 10 times as many unpaid loans compared to US institutions). So far this year, Italian banks have shares battered .

The world's oldest bank, as well as Italy's third largest, Banca Monte dei Paschi (MI:BMPS), is in the most immediate trouble, having failed the ECB's recent stress test, and is in need of a rescue from somewhere. They have a meeting with JP Morgan and Italian investment bank Mediobanca advisors today regarding how to recapitalize in light of adverse market conditions.

In light of risks coming out of the Eurozone, markets will start this week on shakier footing. Though November was a great month for Wall Street, current event risk from the Eurozone could see US markets move lower this coming week. During November the Dow had a 1,000-point gain, to surpass 19,000 and increased 5.4%; the S&P 500 gained 3.4%; and the NASDAQ was up 2.6%. The smallcap Russell 2000 outperformed them all with a November jump of 11%, its best month in five years. Each of the four indices reached record highs.

However, after nearly three weeks of solid gains, the stock market finally took a break throughout last week. The Dow edged up 0.1%, the S&P slipped 1%, and the NASDAQ reversed 2.7%.

In Asia overnight the Italian referendum outcome took its toll: the Nikkei fell 0.82% to close at 18,274.99; the Shanghai Composite dropped 1.22% to 3,204.35; the Hang Seng dipped 0.33% lower, to 22,490.

In Europe markets opened higher: the FTSE is up 0.46% currently at 6,762; the DAX is up 1.64%, currently trading at 10,686 and the Stoxx 50 is up 1.38% to 3,059.

In US pre-market trading the S&P is up 0.38%, the Dow is up 0.42% and the NASDAQ is up 0.46%

The bond sell-off continued for most of last week, but has eased up following Friday's NFP report: 2-year bond yield is now 1.096%; 10-year yield is 2.371%; 30-year yield rose to 3.037%.

h3 Forex/h3

Last week provided mostly good news about the US economy. Data highlights included: Tuesday’s Q3 GDP reported an increase of 3.2% – the best quarterly pace recorded in two years. Friday’s NFP release showed 178,000 new jobs created in November, but the headline number turned out to be the unemployment rate which fell to 4.6%, the lowest level in nine years. If there was any disappointment with Friday's release it came from the wage growth, which fell 0.1%, instead of a 0.2% expected increase.

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Last Friday’s NFP was the last major employment report prior to the Fed's next meeting which begins on December 13. It is almost certain a rate hike will follow. The approach of an almost certain rate hike has been one of the major catalysts driving the recent surge in the dollar. Barring an economic surprise, Trump’s policies after he takes office in January will determine whether the dollar’s bullish trajectory continues.

The recent dollar sell-off has spelled good news for the Canadian dollar, which gained 0.2% to end last week as oil prices rallied following an actual OPEC deal to cut production. Canadian data last week was also better than expected, with encouraging GDP and job growth numbers. CAD could extend to 1.31 next, although if the USD strengthens, it could fall to 1.35, close to its nine-month lows. It’s currently at 1.3321.