Global Analysis from the European Perspective. Preparing for the world of tomorrow




The Perfect Storm for 2020: Weidmann at the ECB, Trump’s trade war, Macron’s failure, Italy’s turmoil

Clouds are gathering: Weidmann will end QE while Macron’s reform will not solve any problem whatsoever. It’ll be the final push for a Eurosceptic Italy, where plans for parallel currencies are popping up. Add Trump’s trade war to the soup and 2020 promises to turn nasty.

It is becoming increasingly clear that at the end of 2019 Jens Weidmann, current President of the Bundesbank, will replace Mario Draghi at the helm of the European Central Bank. The change in terms of economic beliefs will be radical and, combined with the other developing issues in Italy and the US, which will be discussed later in the text, might as well put an end to the misery of the Eurozone.

What does Jens Weidmann believe in?
As a typical post-Weimar German, he believes in strong currency and low inflation. The Financial Times carried an interesting interview with him a few weeks ago,1)Jens Weidmann on Draghi and the ECB, Financial Times 2018-02-23.in which the German financier expressed his opposition to everything that Mario Draghi has stood for in the last few years and made known his wish to stop the quantitative easing program and replace it with raised interest rates. What happens when interest rates increase? If they go up too fast, markets crumble. Low interest rates offered for too long have contributed to the subprime mortgages debacle of 2007-8. In 2012, at the peak of the Eurozone sovereign debt crisis, Draghi promised to do ”whatever it takes” to preserve the European common currency. Weidmann was the only one on the board of the ECB who was opposed to this too. Draghi’s statement had a therapeutic effect on financial markets which quickly calmed down after it. Once he’s gone, however, Weidmann is unlikely to show the same resolve to indeed do whatever it might take to keep the currency together. Finally, just like most Germans, he is not a fan of Emmanuel Macron’s idea of creating a Eurozone budget because the money transfer is seen as too much of a concession towards “lazy Southerners”. Maybe in the end Weidmann will opt to preserve the status-quo, but if he sticks to his beliefs, rates will increase, markets will fall and it’ll be the end of the Eurozone.

Trump is winning, Macron is not
The financial press ridicules the American President and regards his French counterpart as a godsend. Yet, when you look at their hitherto policies, they have been rather similar: less taxation, especially for the rich and restricted immigration. If you look at the results, both economies are experiencing solid growth. Still, it is Macron who is credited for “creating confidence among businesses for his reforms” while Trump’s success is framed as a fluke at best. It might as well be, but the US economic growth is stronger than France’s and the US stock market boom (which began on the night of November 8th 2016 when it became certain that Donald Trump had defeated Hillary Clinton and the market reversed galloping all the way throughout 2017) is a driving factor globally. So, if Mr. Market’s behaviour means anything, then Trump can partly claim credit, Macron can’t.

The balance of real strength between Trump and Macron couldn’t have been made clearer. A few days ago Trump signed his tariffs on steel and aluminium into law, and when Macron called him on the matter it was to no avail.2)Readout of President Donald J. Trump’s Call with President Emmanuel Macron of France, White House 2018-03-10.The latter also called on for the WTO to intervene, but the motivation adduced by Trump is “national security” and there is little the WTO or Macron can do about it. It’s game, set and match for the American president.3)President Trump’s Trade Tariffs Signal A New Global Trade War, Forbes 2018-03-11.Even if the roles had been reversed, the mainstream press would be still praising Macron and mocking Trump. As it is, the French president’s debacle has been rather ignored.

The massive German trade surplus has often been named as a factor of instability on the international stage. Still, the European Commission, the IMF, former US presidents and the rest of the EU members have failed to lessen it so far. Trump is going to do what everyone else did not have the courage to: punish Germany. He will wage a trade and currency war against the Eurozone, and the above-mentioned tariffs are just the first act.

Finally, consider what will become of Macron’s reform of the Eurozone and its budget. The latter according to journalist Wolfgang Munchau, who’s generally well informed on the topic, will be a grand total of €3 billion a year, roughly 0.03% of the Eurozone GDP,4)How big will the euro budget be?, Eurointelligence 2018-02-16.so its contribution to the efforts rescuing the losing members of the European common currency from their fate is negligible. Even if Macron has the finance minister of his own choosing and the budget he is calling for, it won’t help.

Emmanuel Macron might have “all the right ideas” as the mainstream media love to say, but he’s also not delivering on them and there are doubts he ever will, while the media covering for him, come what may, keep digging the grave for their own credibility.

The Italian revolt
Since the last election, Italy is officially a Eurosceptic country. Mainstream parties committed to the European integration project have been vanquished. It is hard to predict if the country is going to have a government. The 5 Stars Movement won the most seats, but lacks the majority. The Democratic Party is imploding: the base wants to support a M5S government because “that’s where our voters went”, but the likely future leadership under the former development minister Carlo Calenda has no intention to do so. Lega has the strongest coalition, but also lacks the numbers and so far has been waiting on the sidelines. Its leader Salvini knows that in case a new election is held he is likely to finish off his ally Berlusconi, by taking even more votes from him. He also knows that if M5S makes a deal with the establishment, they’ll lose votes to him, making him the only credible candidate for change. He’s in no hurry. Mario Draghi will only become available for the position of prime minister in 2019. M5S might actually end up picking him, but supporting a technocratic government would be the end of the protest movement.

The other side of the coin is that once Draghi is no longer at the head of the ECB, keeping interest rates low for the benefit of Italy, the arguments in favour of Italy remaining in the Eurozone are running out.

References   [ + ]

1. Jens Weidmann on Draghi and the ECB, Financial Times 2018-02-23.
2. Readout of President Donald J. Trump’s Call with President Emmanuel Macron of France, White House 2018-03-10.
3. President Trump’s Trade Tariffs Signal A New Global Trade War, Forbes 2018-03-11.
4. How big will the euro budget be?, Eurointelligence 2018-02-16.

3 comments on “The Perfect Storm for 2020: Weidmann at the ECB, Trump’s trade war, Macron’s failure, Italy’s turmoil

  • Beaugeard F. says:

    En fait, les USA s’en fichent !
    Texte ci-dessous (see my text below)

    Guerre economique USA-Chine
    USA-China Economic War

    La Chine pourrait réduire ses investissements aux Etat-unis
    China could cut investments in the United States

    En fait, les USA s’en fichent !
    Après avoir fait marcher la planche a billet (quantitative easing) et créé de multiples bulles spéculatives outre-mer, maintenant que les taux d’intérêt sont en hausse aux USA (dépôts plus lucratif, etc..), toute cette finance internationale va se rediriger en investissements aux USA, vers leurs fonds de pension, et vers Wall-Street.
    Ainsi que comme d’habitude les pétrodollars du Golfe, la moitié au moins des profits des entreprises européennes (Europe colonie US), et via les états américains paradis fiscaux l’argent des mafias, des multinationales US (avantages fiscaux de ces etats), et des dictateurs de part le Monde.

    Google translation

    USA-China Economic War
    China could cut investments in the United States

    In fact, the USA do not care!
    After running the billboard (quantitative easing) and created multiple speculative bubbles overseas, now that interest rates are rising in the US (more lucrative deposits, etc. ..), all this international finance is going redirecting investments in the US, to their pension funds, and to Wall Street.
    As usual Gulf petrodollars, at least half of the profits of European companies (European colony US), and via the US tax havens money mafia, multinational US (tax benefits of these states), and dictators from around the world.

    Article:
    Chinese investment in the US could grind to a halt
    Trump administration’s emerging trade policy may bar the door to acquisitions by Chinese companies in the U.S.
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/chinese-investment-in-the-us-could-grind-to-a-halt/ar-BBKbUcr?li=BBnbfcN
    MSN.COM

    Reply
  • palcau ioan says:

    Macron is a masonic chit president,like all EU politicians,Italy wont leave EU,hopr EU will collapse by itself…sooner better!

    Reply
  • ramdevvyakaranam says:

    Reasons You Are Failing In Your Online Business
    Now, this is going to sound crazy, but the people over at Insta Builder have just released their new sales page for their “drag & drop” sales funnel creator (the one that over 6000 marketers are using right now)…
    And I have to tell you…
    If you need a “checklist” for your sales funnel (to make sure you are getting the highest conversions possible) you NEED to read that letter.
    Here is the link >>> http://instabuilder.com?v1afs8g4S51B6A8J6A
    I’m not even joking right now.
    Get out a pen and piece of paper, go to the sales page, and go through all 32 of those points.
    If your sales funnel isn’t taking advantage of EVERY SINGLE ONE of those conversion boosting tactics… then your funnel isn’t performing like it should.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to ramdevvyakaranam Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published.

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>


GEFIRA provides in-depth and comprehensive analysis of and valuable insight into current events that investors, financial planners and politicians need to know to anticipate the world of tomorrow; it is intended for professional and non-professional readers.

Yearly subscription: 10 issues for €225/$250
Renewal: €160/$175

The Gefira bulletin is available in ENGLISH, GERMAN and SPANISH.

 
Menu
More