French borrowing costs jump on Macron wage rises\, tax cuts

French borrowing costs jump on Macron wage rises, tax cuts

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Ramnarayan

Macron announced wage rises for the poorest workers and tax cuts for pensioners late on Monday, which are expected to increase public spending by 8-10 billion euros.

France's 10-year bond yield rose by as much as five basis points to 0.756 percent on Tuesday, before easing to around 0.71 percent. The spread over equivalent German bonds hit 47.5 basis points, its widest level since May 2017.

"The measures suggest there will be more spending from the French government, which implies a higher deficit in 2019 and weakens the financial position," said

"French newspapers are suggesting this morning that we could have a 3.5 percent deficit in in 2019, which complicates the discussion in the euro area and gives other countries such as an argument for a higher deficit."

The French said on Tuesday the government now expected a 2019 budget deficit of 2.5 percent of economic output, excluding the one-off impact of transforming a payroll tax rebate into a permanent cut.

As the overall deficit was previously expected to be 2.8 percent, the new underlying deficit risks pushing the overall number towards 3.4 percent - past the European Union's 3-percent limit.

"The moves in are negative for the budget deficit and not a good demonstration effect for as whole," said rate

The earlier this year rejected Italy's draft budget, which envisaged a deficit of 2.4 percent of GDP in 2019, up from 1.8 percent this year.

The is willing to accept an increase in Italy's deficit target to 1.95 percent for next year, the newspaper said on Tuesday.

Italy's 10-year government bond yields were up three basis points at 3.12 percent on Tuesday. The spread over widened to 287 bps.

Higher-rated euro zone bond yields fell in late trade on further signs of turbulence in Britain.

Some lawmakers in Theresa May's are confident that enough letters of no confidence have been submitted to trigger a leadership challenge, the of said.

That pushed German Bund yields down to 0.224 percent - matching six-month lows hit last week.

But the Brexit uncertainty weighed on Irish bonds. The gap between 10-year Irish yields and those in benchmark hit its widest in six months at 68 basis points.

(Reporting by Ramnarayan and Dhara Ranasinghe; editing by Andrew Roche)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, December 11 2018. 22:32 IST