German government collapse could have silver lining for Europe’s markets
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THE collapse of Germany’s government could have a silver lining for the eurozone’s ailing economy with potentially higher spending likely to support its currency and stock markets, even if the path remains uncertain.
Markets are already moving in anticipation of more government borrowing that would help stimulate the economy, pushing a closely-watched bond market gauge of debt issuance to a record.
One reason for the collapse of the ruling coalition was disagreement on whether to suspend Germany’s debt brake, which limits borrowing, and the early read out from markets is that fresh elections in February could bring more certainty for an economy that just dodged recession.
German stocks outperformed European peers on news that the government collapsed on Nov 6, another sign of a more positive mood taking hold – just hours after Donald Trump’s US election win raised the threat of tariffs in a fresh blow to Europe’s biggest economy.
“The German growth dynamic has been anaemic and a large part of that has been self-inflicted as Germany has stuck with the debt brake at a time when the economy needs support,” said Zurich Insurance Group’s chief markets strategist Guy Miller.