Categories: FinanceNewsWorld

Morning Bid: Not quite “Together”

A look at the day ahead in markets from Dhara Ranasinghe.

On top of surging inflation, rising interest rates and growing global recession risks, markets in Europe are waking up on Monday to the prospect of heightened uncertainty in France — the euro area’s second biggest economy.

French President Emmanuel Macron is trying to salvage a ruling majority and his economic reform agenda after voters punished his centrist ‘Ensemble’ (Together) alliance in Sunday’s parliamentary election. read more

While Ensemble secured the largest number of lawmakers in the 577-seat National Assembly, it fell short of the threshold required for an absolute majority in a vote that saw a leftwing alliance and the far-right perform strongly.

The euro has softened slightly and the premium investors demand to hold French 10-year government bonds over top-rated Germany widened to 57 basis points from 52 bps on Friday .

France now faces a period of prolonged political instability, while confronting an international crisis in Ukraine and the prospect of slowing growth at home.

Crypto currencies are also in the spotlight, highlighting that turmoil seen across world markets last week isn’t over just yet.

Bitcoin fell below $20,000 over the weekend for the first time since December 2020. That level is of symbolic significance, as it was roughly the peak of the 2017 cycle.

Its hovering around $20,000 as early European trade gets underway but clearly sentiment is fragile. Bitcoin has lost 57% so far this year and 37% this month.

Asian shares meanwhile have been unable to sustain a rare rally as Wall Street futures shed early gains on worries the U.S. Federal Reserve would this week underline its commitment to fighting inflation with further large rate hikes.

European stock futures are flat to a touch higher.

A U.S. holiday means thinned-out trading conditions – a factor that could of course exacerbate volatility.

Bitcoin wobbles around $20,000

Key developments that should provide more direction to markets on Monday:

– China keeps lending benchmarks unchanged, wary of policy divergence risks read more

– U.S. markets closed on Monday for Juneteenth holiday

– Crypto industry gripped by anxiety as bitcoin wobbles near key $20,000 level read more

– China keeps lending benchmarks unchanged, wary of policy divergence risks read more

– German PPI +1.6% m/m, +33.6% y/y in May

– ECB President Christine Lagarde, ECB board member Fabio Panetta, ECB chief economist Philip Lane

Reporting by Dhara Ranasinghe, editing by Karin Strohecker

Source.

World Economic Magazine

Recent Posts

Europe’s Private Credit Moment: Why 2026 Could Redefine the Asset Class

Dubai leveraged its strategic coastline to become a global trade hub, exporting “access itself” through…

2 hours ago

DUBAI REAL ESTATE INDUSTRY SURGE SIGNALS MARKET MATURITY, SAYS LUXURY DEVELOPER

Keturah Reserve launches final sales phase as 2025 data reveals AED86B capital gains and major…

19 hours ago

U.K. Economy Contracts Again as Services Weakness Deepens, Cementing Expectations of a Bank of England Rate Cut

The UK economy contracted again in late 2025, with weaker services output fuelling expectations of…

3 days ago

U.S. Lawmakers Raise Alarm Over Sale of Nvidia H200 Chips to China

U.S. lawmakers are raising alarms over Nvidia’s AI chip exports to China, warning that allowing…

4 days ago

Historical Recognition for Akinwumi Adesina: University of Gambia Re-Names Faculty of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences in his honor

The historic occasion recognized and immortalized Adesina’s name, leadership, contributions to Africa, and his visionary…

4 days ago

BUOYANT DUBAI REAL ESTATE MARKET ROUNDS OFF LANDMARK YEAR WITH DECEMBER SURGE

Record 215,700 annual sales worth AED 686.8 billion underscore city's position as a premier global…

4 days ago