The New Zealand Herald

Calm before the potential storm

Kiwis will be keeping a close eye on two key political events in Europe looming in the next few days

- Mark Lister comment

It’s been a calm several months in European politics, since the anti-climax of the French election last May. However, with two key events looming in the coming days, we could see political risk re-emerge as a concern.

Almost half a million members of Germany’s Social Democrats (SPD) party began voting last week in a postal ballot to decide whether to enter a new coalition with the Conservati­ves, led by Angela Merkel.

Germany held their election on the same weekend as we did here in New Zealand, so the country has been without a formal government for five months now.

Merkel is aiming for a fourth term in office, although if SPD members reject the deal the country might be headed for a minority government or a new election. Neither of these outcomes are ideal, and would be a first for post-war Germany.

The German vote closes on Friday, with the results to be announced two days later on Sunday.

To make things even more interestin­g, that just happens to be the day Italy goes to the polls for its 2018 parliament­ary election. This will be a tight race, and there is every chance results will be inconclusi­ve.

Of the countries that look shaky in the region, Italy is by far the biggest. Germany is the largest economy in the 19-member Eurozone at 29 per cent of GDP, France is second at 21 per cent while Italy is third, representi­ng 16 per cent of the bloc.

The main concerns for most European nations are immigratio­n and terrorism, and these issues are top of the list for Italy as well.

Waves of migrants have entered the country and added to the already mounting pressures from a long period of austerity.

Italians also rank unemployme­nt high on the list of worries. Overall unemployme­nt in Europe is 8.7 per cent, but in Italy it’s higher at 10.8 per cent. Only Greece, Spain and Cyprus are ahead of them at the undesirabl­e end of the scale. Germany, on the other hand, is sitting pretty at just 3.6 per cent unemployme­nt.

On a brighter note, the European economy has been very resilient over the past couple of years. Business activity has been strong, with one reliable indicator hitting a 12-year high in recent months. Germany has been a key beneficiar­y of this, with the IFO gauge of business sentiment (which began in 1991) hitting a record in January.

This has propelled the euro currency to its strongest levels in more than three years against the US dollar, and seen European sharemarke­ts perform strongly.

Local companies exporting to Europe will have benefited, with the NZ dollar down almost 13 per cent against the euro over the past 12 months, compared with a small gain against the greenback.

Europe is our fourth biggest export market (behind China, Australia and the US) taking 7.5 per cent of our goods and services. The region is also key for our tourism sector, so its economic strength, buoyant currency and stable political backdrop are important for us.

We should know the result of these two events early next week, so let’s hope the outcomes don’t take us back to the political uncertaint­y of a few years ago.

Mark Lister

is Head of Private Wealth Research at Craigs Investment Partners. This column is general in nature and should not be regarded as specific investment advice

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