The
capital outflow from the emerging markets is proving as destabilizing as the
previous inflows. Pundits can talk about currency wars all they want, but
the real issue is the ability to cope with volatile capital flows, which is the
price of integration in global economy.
In
fact, the real surprise is the limited resort to outright protectionism, and
surely nothing on the scale of Smoot-Hawley et.al. That fact that the
World Trade Organization has been busy hearing cases is not as much a
sign of insipid beggar-thy-neighbor policies as it is the functioning of a
conflict-resolution mechanism to prevent a tit-for-tat escalation of a genuine
trade war.
The
pressure on capital markets in the emerging markets–currencies, equities and
interest rates–may be eclipsing other developments at the moment. One of
our key interpretive points has been that the European crisis may have enjoyed
a respite, but come next month it will resurface and once again be a key element
of the investment climate.
There are, after all, several
unresolved issues, including the Greece’s funding gap, Portugal’s status and
whether a new program is necessary, and more developments toward a banking
union. It is debatable how much the proximity of the Germany election is
stalling progress and how much is owed to the summer holidays and high level
meeting schedules.
In
any event, it appears that Italy is moving into position to be the most
immediate challenge in Europe. Italy chafes under the Teutonic ordo-liberalism
(that Draghi has said is enshrined in the ECB). It problems are set to
resurface prior to the German election.
Investors
will receive a small taste of what is to come as early as tomorrow. The
Italian cabinet will debate the controversial property tax and VAT under a
cloud of tensions spurred by Berlusconi’s conviction of tax fraud and pending a
vote in the Senate to enforce the court ruling that the former prime minister
should be barred from public office for several years.
The
more the center-right succeeds in its push to abolish the controversial
property tax on primary residence and resist the VAT increase, the greater the
fight promise to be over filling the funding gap that will be evident when
attention turns to the 2014 budget.
Tactically,
the Letta government has little choice. It is better to postpone
implementation of taxes that to repeal them, which was what the center-right
pushes. This a congenital defect inherited from the Monti government,
whose legislative agenda relied on ruling by decrees. Abolishing the
taxes altogether now would likely not only this government, but likely future
governments as well, from re-instituting such increases, leaving the Italy
fiscally vulnerable.
That
said, remember, Italy has a primary budget surplus. That means that
excluding debt servicing, Italy is running a budget surplus. Another way
of saying this is that tax revenues are sufficient to cover current expenses.
Given the recessionary conditions, raising taxes for the sole purpose of
reducing the debt inherited from past mistakes does seem foolhardy.
The
Letta government is terrible circumscribed by the fragile grand coalition that
was ultimately foisted on the political system by the threat of a presidential
resignation that could have triggered a constitutional crisis. This means
that it is too weak to address any serious problem, including the kind of
electoral reform needed to prevent continued weak governments. It has
focused instead on largely small measures that are not very controversial.
Yesterday, for example, it moved to cut the funding of official autos by
20%. It moved to reduce the number of short-term employment contracts of
given to civil servants. It also focusing on accessing EU structural
funds.
Many
members of Berlusconi’s center-right party have threatened to resign from
government if the center-left votes to strip Berlusconi from office. That
debate is set to begin on September 9 and reports suggest it could take a few
weeks before the whole chamber votes on the measure. To be clear, not
outcome is good for Italy.
If
the court decision is enforced by the Senate and Berlusconi is banned from
political office, the Letta government could very well collapse. This
would put Italy in a precarious position to draft the 2014 budget. And
without electoral reform, a strong government is almost impossible to envision.
Of note, Grillo’s 5-Star movement has waned a bit in the polls.
However, despite sectarian infighting and being arguable marginalized in
recent months, it may still be a potent political force.
On
the other hand, if the center-left does not muster the strength and courage to
enforce the ban, Berlusconi has the Letta government over the proverbial
barrel. It will confirm that the center-left does not want to go to the
polls and this will allow Berlusconi to dictate the terms and drive the 2014
budget.
It
would demonstrate one of Berlusconi’s supporters main claims–that the
center-left cannot defeat the former prime minister at the polls–and looks for
other means to do so. It would not simply be a victory for Berlusconi,
but it would represent a demoralizing defeat for the center-left and its
leaders that emerged since the Clean Hands investigations.
The
re-emergence of simmering political problems in Italy will have clear
implications for investors. Italian assets, both bonds and stocks, have
already begun under-performing. The 10-year yield is up about 40 bp over
the past three months, a third of which has taken place over the past week.
The
premium over Germany has widened nearly 30 bp since hitting a 2-year low
earlier this month. The discount to Spain has been reduced to its smallest
since March 2012, when Italy’s benchmark yield fell below Spain’s.
Italy’s 2-year yield has pierced the 2% threshold for the first time in a
couple of months.
Rising
bond yields has coincided with the under-performance of Italian equities.
Over the past five sessions, the Italian bourse is the worst performing
G10 equity, losing about 2.25%. Banks are among the worst performing
sectors. It is Italy’s banks that are the real Achilles Heel, not so much
government finances.
This
in turn may help explain the fact that the sovereign credit default swaps have
risen in price more than one would expect given the magnitude of the rise in
sovereign yields. It appears that the CDS market is being used to hedge
not only sovereign exposure but Italian banks as well. Rising bad loan
books have already contributed to a weak outlook, but banks seems ill-prepared
for an increase in interest rates. Moreover, Italian banks have
generally lagged other banks in repaying the long-term repo money borrowed from
the ECB.
Italy’s
challenges on threatening to bust the seams of the fragile calm of the euro
area over the past couple of months. The combination of Fed tapering and
an Italian crisis will have negative knock on effects on other peripheral
markets and could be the spark that reignites the European crisis.
No comments :
Post a Comment