DayFR Euro

Debt: tension on 's borrowing rate, the “spread” rises pushed by uncertainty over the budgetnational assembly – 11/26/2024 at 5:58 p.m.

In the midst of examining the 2025 budget, the question is “how many compromises Barnier will make and how much it will cost” to avoid having to resort to 49.3 to have it adopted, according to an observer.

( AFP / BERTRAND GUAY )

The borrowing rates granted to on the markets have increased and the gap between them and those enjoyed by Germany – an indicator of the confidence placed in France – has returned to its highest level since the dissolution in June, a sign of investors' fears about the budget vote and the future of the government.

The yield on 10-year French government bonds stood at 3.02% around 3:20 p.m. GMT on Tuesday November 26 and its German equivalent was at 2.21%.

The difference, called “spread”, amounts to 0.81 percentage points

at the same level as at the end of June, in the wake of the surprise dissolution of the National Assembly by the French President, Emmanuel Macron. On Monday, the “spread” even exceeded this high by reaching 0.83 percentage points.

This rate difference “constitutes

an indicator of choice to measure the confidence placed in France vis-à-vis Germany

and its economic prospects, explains John Plassard, investment specialist for Mirabaud.

“In question, the finance bill, rejected in the Assembly, began its examination in public session in the Senate,” he continued. A formal vote in the Senate is scheduled for December 12. Then seven deputies and seven senators will try to find a compromise on the budget during a joint committee (CMP). If they succeed,

the final version of the text seems promised in 49.3 upon its return to the deputies.

And therefore to a motion of censure examined around December 20.

The RN “kingmaker”

For the markets, “the question is whether the National Rally (RN) will abstain in the vote of confidence or not,” explains Marine Mazet, rates strategist at Nomura. “The center and right parties will vote for Michel Barnier, the New Popular Front (NFP) against, and

the RN finds itself kingmaker

“, she added.

In this context, know

“how many compromises will Barnier make and how much will it cost”

is a source of concern for investors, summarizes Marine Mazet. If the government falls at the end of December, “political and fiscal instability will worsen at a time when there will be little liquidity on the markets, which could give rise to exacerbated movements,” detailed the strategist.

Until then,

France has a meeting on Friday with the Standard and Poor's rating agency

who must deliver his verdict on the country's score. This rating comes at a time when France is still the subject of an excessive deficit procedure with the European Commission.

With a clearly slipping public deficit, expected this year at 6.2% of gross domestic product according to Brussels, France displays the worst performance of the Twenty-Seven with the exception of Romania, and remains very far from the 3% ceiling. permitted by EU rules.

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