Business Standard

Italian assets show little panic before referendum

- ANOOJA DEBNATH

As the market’s eyes turn to Italy’s constituti­onal referendum, the nation’s assets are showing few signs of panic.

Italy’s 10-year bonds posted their best week since July, while its stock index outperform­ed all of its developed-market peers in the period. Even the euro, which fell to the lowest since March 2015 last month, is bouncing back before Sunday’s vote, which may dictate Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s political future.

The referendum, which is targeted to overhaul governance and make it easier to pass reforms, has morphed into a confidence vote on Renzi and a barometer on whether the wave of populism in the Western world has taken hold of continenta­l Europe. As the referendum gets closer, however, investors, who sold Italian assets in the wake of Donald Trump’s election victory, are reassessin­g the likely impact of a ‘‘no’’ vote on financial markets.

“If the market is really concerned we would expect the spread between Italian bonds and German bonds to rise, but we’ve seen this week that actually it’s declined,” said Lutz Karpowitz, a senior currency strategist at Commerzban­k in Frankfurt.

Italian bonds jumped this week, with 10-year yields tumbling 19 basis points. The extra yield that investors demand for holding Italian debt over German bunds fell to 160 basis points on Friday, the lowest in three weeks. The European Central Bank is scheduled to announce its latest policy decision on December 8, when officials may extend their asset-purchase programme.

Looking at the tightening in yield spreads “it seems that the market has become a little less concerned,” said Martin van Vliet, an interest-rate strategist at ING Groep in Amsterdam. “I’m going to wait until what happens and then see what it means for the ECB, because ironically the worse the outcome, the more the ECB will try to positively surprise markets. If we get a ‘yes’ we get a big relief and the ECB might be tempted not to deliver according to market exceptions. So there’s this interplay between the referendum outcome and what the ECB might do.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India