April 26, 2024

Merkel Plays to Germans as She Jousts With Europe

Ms. Merkel, 58 and in power since 2005, will seek a third four-year term in national elections on Sept. 22. Until then, she wants to avoid rocking the boat with voters, who give her popularity ratings in the 60 percent to 70 percent range and seem quite content with the give-and-take, muddling-through approach she has adopted in the protracted euro crisis, often to the consternation of financial markets.

Whether she is shadowboxing with the financial markets or engaged in direct spats with the leaders of Russia and Turkey, as she was this month, Ms. Merkel likes Germany to get the last word.

That was well illustrated early Thursday, after hours of haggling in Brussels over the latest compromise on banking. The bargain struck by European finance ministers required shareholders and creditors to take losses when banks collapse, with states and taxpayers stepping up only later. But because Germany still opposes any plan making its taxpayers liable for the losses of foreign banks, it stopped well short of the kind of debt sharing that markets have urged on Ms. Merkel and her country since the crisis erupted three years ago.

Martin Lück, an economist at UBS in Frankfurt, said that in Berlin’s political circles, people are more responsive to the German Parliament. “We know what the financial markets expect of us — but we are not elected by them,” is the view, he said, adding that officials cite the high popularity ratings for Ms. Merkel and her finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble.

As if to underscore her dominance, Ms. Merkel displayed fighting form in Parliament on Thursday, before the Brussels summit meeting. As forceful as she gets, at least in public, she insisted to warm applause from her conservative deputies that Germany had shown over the past four years that “we can do both — growth and fiscal consolidation.” She rebuffed attacks from Peer Steinbrück, her Social Democratic challenger in September who is currently floundering in the polls and has accused her of causing mass unemployment.

Ms. Merkel, once famed for an austerity course she now insists was never her sole aim, has softened of late, particularly when it comes to those millions of jobless young people. Conscious that around 7.5 percent of those under 25 are unemployed in Germany — compared with 62.5 percent for Greece, 56.4 percent for Spain, and around 40 percent for Portugal and Italy — she went out of her way on Thursday to express sympathy.

“They are owed,” she told Parliament ahead of hosting a meeting on jobless youth in Europe next week, especially because they bear “no blame for the mistakes of past years.”

That put the issue squarely where Ms. Merkel seems to want it — in the backyards of other European governments. Still, even there she dodged and weaved, noting for instance that she and President François Hollande of France would be presenting joint proposals on Thursday and Friday in Brussels, never mind recent evidence of coolness in the French-German partnership.

It all suggests, said Josef Janning of the German Council on Foreign Relations, that before Sept. 22, “nothing should happen which could endanger the election success of Ms. Merkel.” Her strategy, he added, is simply “to unsettle the Germans as little as possible.”

Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg Bank, noted that this policy, if successful, would change little after the German vote. In part that is because Germany and Europe know what to expect of each other, and in part because Ms. Merkel’s course finds such broad consensus at home.

Even if Mr. Steinbrück unexpectedly won, Mr. Schmieding said, he served as finance minister in Ms. Merkel’s first coalition government and would be unlikely to change tack.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/28/world/europe/merkel-plays-to-germans-as-she-jousts-with-europe.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Markets Slip in Asia and Europe Over Debt Woes

HONG KONG — Stock markets tumbled across the Asia-Pacific region and in Europe on Wednesday and the price of gold shot up as investors around the globe remained nervous about the debt problems in the United States and Europe.

Several leading markets in Asia dropped 2 percent or more, showing that the region’s largely positive economic outlook is doing little to insulate its stocks from the jitters that have battered global markets this year.

The Kospi in South Korea closed 2.6 percent lower, in Australia, the S.P./ASX 200 shed 2.3 percent and in Taiwan, the Taiex sagged 1.5 percent.

In Japan, the Nikkei 225 index fell 2.1 percent to 9,637.14 points.

The Hang Seng in Hong Kong and the Straits Times in Singapore were about 2 percent lower by midafternoon.

And key indexes in Europe were more than 1 percent lower soon after the open.

By contrast, gold, traditionally seen as a safe investment in times of uncertainty, spiked to yet another nominal record high of $1,671 per ounce.

The stock market moves followed a similarly dismal day for Wall Street on Tuesday, as investors once again became worried about the ability of several European countries to meet their debt obligations, and took in the fact that the compromise over the U.S. debt ceiling did not erase the risk of a ratings downgrade.

Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch Ratings hammered home the latter point on Tuesday. Both agencies reaffirmed their triple-A rating for the United States, but Moody’s put a negative outlook on its rating
, a sign of a possible downgrade further down the line. It warned that further fiscal consolidation would probably be needed and that any slowing in U.S. economic growth also would pose a risk.

Fitch echoed the caution, saying that while the debt ceiling agreement reached in Washington was an important first step, it was “not the end of the process toward putting in place a credible plan to reduce the budget deficit to a level that would secure the United States’ AAA status over the medium-term.”

The U.S. debt issue, and the possibility of a downgrade to a credit rating that had once been deemed bulletproof, has caused widespread concern among analysts and policy makers, especially in those nations that hold a high level of U.S. debt.

Analysts at Bank of America Merrill Lynch earlier this week titled a research note on the U.S. debt deal as a “stay of execution,” and Barclays Capital economists noted in a report on Wednesday that while the political wrangling prior to debt ceiling agreement may be over, “the fundamental story underlying U.S. fiscal accounts and debt profile remains.”

Reflecting the concerns among holders of U.S. Treasuries, Zhou Xiaochuan, the governor of the Chinese central bank, on Wednesday said the People’s Bank of China would closely monitor U.S. efforts to tackle its debt.

As the United States’ biggest foreign creditor — holding an estimated $1.5 trillion in U.S. government debt — China is especially sensitive to any developments that could undermine the value of its Treasuries holdings.

“Large fluctuations and uncertainties in this market would undermine the stability of international financial system and hinder global recovery,” the central bank said in a statement on its Web site
. “China hopes the U.S. administration and the Congress would take responsible policy measures to handle its debt issue in light with the interests of the whole world including those of the United States.”

China has signaled that it wants to diversify its holdings by purchasing other assets, but its ability to do so is limited as other markets, like those of European or Japanese debt, are not big or liquid enough to absorb the bulk of China’s foreign-exchange reserves, which are the largest in the world.

The turmoil in the United States has also had painful implications for Japan, which has seen its currency rise to ever-higher levels against a weakening dollar.

The Japanese currency was trading at around 77.2 yen per dollar on Wednesday. That is not far off a record high it hit against the dollar after the devastating earthquake on March 11, and represents a rise of more than 4 percent over the past month alone.

Despite Japan’s poor growth prospects, the yen has been gradually ascending since the global financial crisis, adding pain to Japanese exporters, who have seen their goods become more expensive in overseas markets.

The latest currency movements have prompted a volley of warnings from Japanese policy makers aimed at halting the yen’s ascent.

“Regardless of whether we intervene in the currency market or not, the government wants to do its utmost to prevent the yen from rising further,” Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda said Wednesday, Reuters reported.

The Japanese central bank, meanwhile, is widely expected to announce further steps to prop up economic growth at the end of a two-day policy meeting on Friday, most likely by expanding a program that buys assets ranging from government bonds to private debt.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/04/business/global/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss