December 17, 2024
Euro drops as French government crisis escalates #FrenchFinance

Euro drops as French government crisis escalates #FrenchFinance

CashNews.co

By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss

NEW YORK (Reuters) -The euro faltered on Monday against a strong U.S. dollar on growing concerns about a possible government collapse in France, which would stall plans to curb a burgeoning budget deficit.

The greenback, meanwhile, extended gains after strong U.S. manufacturing data from both the Institute for Supply Management and S&P Global reports. However, despite the generally upbeat data, Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller said on Monday he was inclined to cut the benchmark interest rate at the Dec. 17-18 meeting as monetary policy remained restrictive.

Monday’s rise in the dollar against a basket of currencies followed the U.S. unit’s first weekly fall posted on Friday since November 2023.

In Europe, the risk premium investors demand to hold French debt rather than benchmark German bonds jumped after France’s far-right National Rally (RN) President Jordan Bardella said his party would likely back a no-confidence motion in the coming days unless there were a “last-minute miracle”.

Leading RN lawmaker Marine Le Pen has given Prime Minister Michel Barnier until Monday to meet her party’s budget demands.

The euro fell 1% to $1.0469, on track for its largest daily fall since early November.

“Crashing political sentiment in France and another activity data beat in the U.S. have handed the euro a dire start to December,” wrote Kyle Chapman, FX market analyst at Ballinger Group, in emailed comments. Ballinger provides currency risk management and trading services.

“As expected, the interim government now faces a vote of no confidence that it is likely to lose, and with a new election not allowed until the summer, there is no clear path to reducing the deficit in the near term.”

The yield spread between French and German 10-year government bonds – a gauge of the premium investors demand to hold French debt – rose 7.6 basis points to 87.3 bps after hitting 90 bps last week, its highest level since 2012, during the euro area’s sovereign debt crisis.

POSITIVE US DATA; WALLER BACKS FED CUT IN DECEMBER

Monday’s data once again showed a resilient American economy, with U.S. manufacturing activity improving in November, orders growing for the first time in eight months, and factories facing significantly lower prices for inputs.

The Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing PMI increased to 48.4 last month from 46.5 in October, which was the lowest level since July 2023.

The S&P Global final manufacturing PMI also rose to 49.7, from the initial 48.8 estimate.

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