The Borneo Post

Parallel currency proposal rocks Italian government bonds

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LONDON: Italian government bond yields jumped on Tuesday, stretching the gap with German peers to a five-week high, in the wake of proposals to introduce a parallel currency in Italy that have upped the ante for elections due next year.

Italy’s 10-year bond yield, which moves inversely to the price, climbed as much as 9 basis points to a three-week high at 2.13 per cent.

It closed up 7 bps, its biggest daily rise in a month.

As well as concern about the ECB’s monetary policy and geopolitic­s, analysts said the sell- off was caused by reports at the weekend that former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, who leads the centre- right Forza Italia party, has indicated his support for the introducti­on of a parallel currency.

The report highlights concerns about broader anti-euro sentiment in Italy, the bloc’s third biggest economy, as it heads into elections due by May next year.

“People are referring to this story where Berlusconi outlines his idea of a parallel currency,” said Benjamin Schroeder, senior rates strategist at ING.

“This is not a new idea but what you see is that as people start positionin­g for Italian elections, stories like these get more and more attention.”

Earlier this year, comments by France’s far-right leader Marine Le Pen about leaving the euro rattled markets heading into French presidenti­al elections in April and May.

While those jitters faded with the election of Emmanuel Macron as French president, political uncertaint­y in Italy could unsettle financial markets once more.

The idea of a parallel currency it Italy is also significan­t because it could be a way for Berlusconi to find some common ground with other political parties such as the anti-immigrant Northern League and right-wing Brothers of Italy, said Lorenzo Codogno, a visiting professor at the London School of Economics and chief economist at LC Macro Advisors.

“In fact, over the next few days the three parties are due to sit together and decide a common programme,” he said.

“Politicall­y, it would also be an important step towards preparing the centre-right for the next general election.”

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