French stocks turn higher, risk premium steady as investors process election result
French shares turned higher on Monday after initial falls and the risk premium of French bonds over German narrowed as investors digested elections which left France facing a hung parliament and likely taxing negotiations to form a government.
A surprise left-wing surge in Sunday’s election blocked Marine Le Pen’s quest to bring the far right to power in the National Assembly but no single group secured a working majority.
That meant French assets traded choppily at the open as traders struggled to process relief at the absence of a far-right victory that could have boosted spending and borrowing, and concern about a more powerful left which opposed President Emmanuel Macron’s pro-market reforms.
The lack of clarity about who will eventually form a government added to the uncertain market tone.
France’s blue-chip CAC40 share index was last up 0.4%, reversing an earlier fall, though the benchmark is still down around 4% since the election was called on June 9.
French banks were particularly hard hit by the sell-off in the run-up to the vote, due to concerns about the effect of higher borrowing on their large holdings of French government debt, and fears of possible windfall taxes.
However, Societe Generale (OTC: SCGLY), Credit Agricole (OTC: CRARY) and BNP Paribas (OTC: BNPQY) were up between 0.5% and 1.8% on Monday, also after initial falls.
Opinion polls had forecast Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally (RN) would be the largest party, but the election leaves France’s 577-seat assembly divided into three big groups – the left, centrists, and the far right – with hugely different platforms and no tradition at all of working together.
“I think the markets will be happy we’re avoiding this extreme situation with the far right,” said Aneeka Gupta, director of macroeconomic research at WisdomTree.
Though “because each party’s vote is split and no one has an absolute majority,” she said it would also be hard for the left to pass its policies too.
Bond markets too were uncertain how to price the outcome and the gap between Germany and France’s 10-year bond yields widened to as much as 71.1 basis points but was last a touch narrower at 66 bps.
That spread reflects the premium investors’ demand to hold French debt rather than euro zone benchmark Bunds. It widened to above 80 basis points in the build-up to the election, its highest since the eurozone crisis in 2012, as investors feared a far-right majority that could implement high-spending policies.
A higher spread makes it more costly for France to borrow on international bond markets than its neighbours, reflecting investor wariness about lending to the country.
Investors also have concerns that the left’s plans could unwind many of Macron’s reforms and believe a gridlock could end attempts to rein in France’s debt, which stood at 110.6% of gross domestic product in 2023.
The euro steadied after an initial fall against both the dollar and the pound and was at $1.0835 and 84.58 pence, respectively.