Titoli di Stato area Euro Titoli di stato Portogallo - Tendenze ed operatività

Reuters.

Unconventional monetary policy tools distort markets so they should be used with extra care, even if they are intended to be temporary, European Central Bank policymaker Jens Weidmann said on Friday as the bank contemplates extending stimulus.

Past drivers of inflation remain in place so as the euro zone economy increases its output, inflation will once again rise, Weidmann, the head of Germany's Bundesbank and one of the chief critics of the ECB's stimulus measures told a conference.

"And we shouldn’t forget that our concept of price stability is a medium-term concept. So monetary policy doesn’t need to respond automatically whenever inflation deviates from levels consistent with the definition of price stability," he said.


The ECB will debate in December whether to extend its 80 billion euro per month asset purchases programme aimed at boosting inflation after it has undershot the bank's target for well over 3 years, raising the risk that firms and households lose confidence in the bank's policy objective.

"Unconventional instruments should be used with extra care – even if they are used only temporarily," Weidmann said.
 
Rendimenti decennali

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O indicador coincidente mensal do Banco de Portugal para medir a evolução da actividade económica subiu em Outubro pelo quarto mês consecutivo, sinalizando que a economia nacional continua a reforçar o crescimento após ter conseguido a melhor prestação da Zona Euro no terceiro trimestre.

O indicador subiu para 0,9% em Outubro, tendo subido uma décima em cada um dos três meses anteriores. Atingiu o valor mais elevado desde Março deste ano, quando registou uma taxa de crescimento de 1%.

O PIB de Portugal cresceu 1,6% em termos homólogos no terceiro trimestre e 0,8% face aos três meses anteriores. Este indicador do Banco de Portugal vem sugerir que a tendência de aceleração se manteve no primeiro mês do último trimestre do ano.

A recuperação da economia no terceiro trimestre foi conseguida sobretudo à custa das exportações, o que terá persistido em Outubro.

De acordo com o Banco de Portugal, o indicador coincidente mensal para o consumo privado mantém-se estável desde Maio, após a diminuição observada no início de 2016. A taxa de crescimento registada em Outubro foi de 1,9%, igualando o registado nos cinco meses anteriores.

(JdN)
 
"A capitalização da Caixa está em curso, está aprovada e tem um conjunto de medidas importantes para a vida da CGD, que vai ser concretizado. A injecção pública de capital na CGD irá ocorrer no ano de 2017", afirmou Mário Centeno no parlamento, onde está a ser ouvido sobre a proposta de Orçamento do Estado para 2017 (OE2017).

O ministro respondia a questões colocadas pelo deputado do PSD Duarte Pacheco, que lembrou que o Conselho de Finanças Públicas (CFP) admitiu que a recapitalização da CGD possa a vir ter um impacto no défice, consoante o ano em que ocorrer, interrogando quando é que será realizada, em 2016 ou 2017.

"A capitalização da CGD tem um acordo com a Comissão Europeia de ser concretizada sem ajuda do Estado. O impacto que um investimento desta natureza tem no défice será obviamente avaliado e analisado em conjunto com as autoridades europeias", afirmou Mário Centeno.


Centeno: Recapitalização da Caixa só em 2017
 
Il piano di recupero crediti procede meglio del previsto: 170 mln recuperati nelle prime 2 settimane (su 100 previsti).

O Plano Especial de Redução do Endividamento ao Estado e Segurança Social (PERES) entrou em vigor há duas semanas e as adesões já registadas abrangem mais de 90 mil dívidas que se encontravam em processo e executivo e permitem a recuperação de 170 milhões de euros apenas de dívidas de impostos. O elevado número de adesões ao longo destas duas primeira semanas indicia que o valor inicialmente orçamentado para este ano vai ser ultrapassado. O OE2017 foi desenhando no pressuposto de que o PERES renderia 100 milhões de euros.

PERES já recuperou 170 milhões de euros de dívidas
 
Lo scenario che potrebbe accelerare il cambio di politica monetaria e il conseguente riallineamento dei rendimenti sui tds (Reuters).

Slowly but surely, the economic policy tide in Europe is turning, and it may only be a matter of time before Germany is swept up.

By adding its voice this week to the long list of institutions pressing Germany to spend more, the European Commission left Berlin looking more isolated and out-of-step than at any time since the outbreak of the global financial crisis nearly a decade ago.

Predictably, the Commission's call for a "significantly more positive fiscal stance" in the euro area was shot down by Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble and the conservative media establishment in Germany.
On Friday, Schaeuble accused the Commission of overstepping its mandate and urged it to focus its energies on enforcing the EU's fiscal rules.

But by this time next year, the episode may be looked back upon as the first step towards a broader change in Europe's economic approach, away from the austerity-first stance pushed successfully by Berlin for many years.

This could be fuelled by a range of factors: the pressures arising from Donald Trump's victory in the U.S. election and the arrival of new governments in France and Germany in 2017.

"We expect that the German position will gradually lose influence," Marco Protopapa of JPMorgan said this week.

Trump's win is especially significant. On the one hand, it is likely to increase pressure on Germany to spend more public money on defence and security.

On the other, it sends a powerful signal to the German political establishment about the dangers of ignoring an increasingly frustrated underclass, buffeted by the forces of globalisation, that has shown a readiness to vent its anger at the ballot box.

GRAND BARGAIN

The looming French election will be crucial. Centre-right frontrunner Alain Juppe, and his top conservative rivals Francois Fillon and Nicolas Sarkozy, are all promising radical economic reform if they are elected in May of next year.

That could open the door to the sort of "grand bargain", or reforms-for-stimulus compromise between France and Germany, that has been talked about for years but was impossible with a weak, unpopular Francois Hollande in the Elysee and the French economy languishing.

"We are very much in the grand bargain game," an adviser to Juppe told Reuters.

The real game changer could be the German election in the autumn of next year and the fate of Schaeuble, the personification of Germany's rule-based restrictive approach to fiscal policy.

The most likely outcome of that vote looks like another "grand coalition" between Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives and the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD).
Schaeuble, 74, has already said that he plans to run for a seat in the Bundestag again, a signal to many that he would like to continue to play an important role in the next cabinet.


But the SPD, which would probably have first choice of ministries in such a constellation, could claim the finance ministry this time around, as they did in 2005 in Merkel's first term.
That would push Schaeuble into another ministry, blunting his role as a guardian of fiscal rectitude.

One senior official who served in both grand coalitions said the lessons of the past years would push Merkel's next coalition partner to take the finance ministry instead of the foreign ministry, the traditional first choice.
"Regardless of who that partner is, everyone has understood that the finance ministry has a great deal more value than the foreign ministry," the official said.


FROM WITHIN
Christian Odendahl, chief economist at the Centre for European Reform, said the European Commission's call for more spending was unlikely to sway Germany.

"The change needs to come from within," he said. But Odendahl does believe that a more vigorous debate is developing within Germany over the wisdom of Schaeuble's "Schwarze Null", or balanced budget, policies.

A poll for public broadcaster ARD in September showed that 58 percent of Germans favoured spending additional tax revenues on infrastructure investments, compared with 22 percent who prefer debt reduction and 16 percent who want tax cuts.

"If you had a different finance minister or if the political case for a topic-based fiscal expansion grew, then you could see a shift," he said, citing the messages from Trump's election. "Merkel is far too pragmatic and political to make the Schwarze Null a priority when there are other problems to address."

A more expansive German fiscal policy after the election may help pave the way for a tightening of monetary policy, a step Schaeuble himself has called for.

The European Central Bank (ECB), which meets next month to decide on whether to extend its quantitative easing (QE), or bond-buying programme, has been looking for ways out of its ultra-loose stance. It too has called on Germany to grab the stimulus baton.

Marcel Fratzscher, who runs the Berlin-based DIW economic institute and is a former senior official at the ECB, says the pressure is building on Berlin to shift its stance.

His worry is that the ruling parties may end up wasting the fiscal wiggle room they have by making lavish promises to pensioners in the coming election campaign.

"I think there will be a further shift, even if Schaeuble stays. If the United States ratchets up spending and this is successful then it would be a signal," he said. "My worry is that it could come too late, that the government will have used its fiscal space for pension increases and tax reductions."
 
La Bce e il populismo (altro articolo da Reuters).

[...]


If they only looked at financial markets, ECB rate setters should be moderately pleased: euro zone inflation expectations, bond yields and stocks have all gone up since Trump's victory, showing investors are betting on spending-led stronger U.S. economic growth.

In addition, higher bond yields have eased immediate concerns the ECB may run out of German debt to buy in its 1.74 trillion euros asset-purchase programme, the centre-piece of its stimulus strategy.

However, top officials stress the situation is far more complex than this and the ECB still looks set to announce an extension of its bond buying beyond their March deadline at the bank's Dec. 8 meeting.


First, rising borrowing costs for indebted peripheral governments show that investors are pricing in rising political risk in the euro zone as anti-globalisation and eurosceptic voices are emboldened by Trump's win, which came hard on the heels of the Brexit vote.

This was particularly visible in Italy where the government's borrowing costs were on track on Friday for their biggest two-week rise since the 2012 debt crisis and banking stocks fell ahead of a Dec. 4 referendum that could unseat pro-euro Prime Minister Matteo Renzi.

"The overall (market) signal is not clear cut," a central bank official said, stressing it was still too early to consider any countermove.


Second, Vice President Vitor Constancio has warned that any fiscal easing in the United States -- such as Trump's planned infrastructure spending -- may not benefit the euro zone if the new U.S. administration sticks to its 'America first' pledge, hurting Europe's exports to its biggest trading partner.

Even a hawkish member of the ECB's Executive Board, Yves Mersch, warned that growth in the euro zone was still "fragile" and the inflation pick-up not yet sustainable.

This was further emphasised by President Mario Draghi, who said on Friday the recovery relied on continued monetary support from the ECB.

Both Mersch and Draghi also warned that rolling back financial regulation could pave the way for a repeat of the 2008 crisis, a thinly veiled reference to Trump's campaign promise to ease those rules.

Meanwhile, confidence remains low that euro zone governments will heed the ECB's long-standing call for greater fiscal spending in surplus countries such as Germany, despite a European Commission's plea for looser strings this week.

"In principle, we welcome any proposal for growth supportive fiscal policy," Mersch told Reuters this week. "But we have not seen the details and there have been some disappointments in this regard in the past."

The momentum for ECB asset-buying thus remains in place.

ECB fears populist backlash after Trump's win - sources
 

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