Low growth and high obligation uncertainty Eurozone crisis, ECB warns
The Eurozone risks another obligation crisis if the bloc cannot boost growth, lower community obligation and fix “policy uncertainty”, the European Central financial institution has warned.
In its annual monetary Stability Review, published on Wednesday, the ECB sounded the alarm over a potential gain of “economy concerns over sovereign obligation sustainability”.
It pointed to “elevated obligation levels and high monetary schedule deficits” as well as tepid growth and uncertainties caused by recent “election outcomes at the European and national levels, notably in France”.
Spreads between French and German 10-year national securities — a gauge of investors’ concerns — hit 0.78 percentage points this month, close to the 12-year high reached in the run-up to this summer’s parliamentary election.
“Headwinds to financial expansion from factors like frail productivity make elevated obligation levels and monetary schedule deficits more likely to reignite obligation sustainability concerns,” the ECB warned on Wednesday.
However Italian spreads against German obligation — an indicator of investor worries across the bloc — are at much tighter levels than they were during the Eurozone crisis.
During that crisis, which began more than a decade ago, Greece narrowly avoided a default as concerns about its monetary stability fuelled economy unrest over the ordinary liquid assets. This only subsided after then-ECB president Mario Draghi pledged to do “whatever it takes” to prevent a collapse of the liquid assets area.
By its nature, the ECB’s monetary Stability Review focuses on risks to the region but its warnings about budgetary risks are more outspoken than in previous editions.
The ECB said sovereign capitalization uncertainty premiums could be pushed higher by macro-monetary shocks, pointing to “frail” fundamentals in several member states and maturing sovereign obligation being “rolled over” at higher gain rates.
It added the combination of low growth and high government obligation in the 20-country liquid assets bloc could make it more challenging for governments to pay for higher defence needs and investments to fight climate transformation.
In an indication of the region’s frail growth prospects, the European percentage last week downgraded its 2025 growth projection for the Eurozone to 1.3 per cent and warned the region is set to fall further behind the US.
The ECB is also concerned that distribute and debt safety markets are exposed to rising risks of “sharp adjustments”, pointing to “high valuations and uncertainty concentration” that had already resulted in “several pronounced but shortlived spikes in volatility”.
It added that “recent economy corrections have not dissipated concerns over the overvaluation of stake markets or the potential for an AI-related resource worth bubble.”
In a potential economic slump, financial institution equilibrium sheets could also receive a hit as Eurozone consumers and companies are already struggling with higher rates, the ECB said.
The threat of higher losses on commercial real estate “could be significant for person banks and stake distribution funds”, it added.
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