HALISTER1: U.S. Vote, Italy Referendum Among Risks for Credit Spreads: DB

U.S. Vote, Italy Referendum Among Risks for Credit Spreads: DB

(Bloomberg) -- A vote against Italy’s constitutional reforms would be negative but may take several months to play out; impact of the U.S. presidential elections also likely won’t be felt until 2017, Deutsche Bank analysts including Jim Reid write in client note.
  • Deutsche Bank trims year-end credit spread ests. for Europe and U.K.
  • While a ‘no’ vote in Italy would likely lead to a wobble in markets, the worst case scenario of Five Star Movement winning in fresh general elections, and a more anti-Euro/EU approach, may still take some time to materialize
  • The outlook for the U.S. economy may rest on how successful the next president is in pushing through fiscal spending plans; execution is a big issue for both especially with the need for it to pass through Congress; this will stretch into 2017
  • Nearer term, the technicals are far better than Deutsche Bank had thought at start of 2016, supporting tighter spreads even as the U.S. in particular is in late cycle
  • Forecasts tighter year-end spreads as the ECB and BOE are buying bonds and it’s difficult to fight them
    • Expects EUR IG non-financials to tighten to 95bps vs 130bps previously, all EUR HY to tighten to 410bps vs 435bps, GBP non-financials to 120bps vs 150bps
    • In GBP bonds, says BOE QE is already largely priced in but may see some more outperformance once eligibility is announced and purchases begin; GBP HY looks cheap vs IG
    • Constructive on bank credit including T2s and AT1s and on corporate hybrids
  • Expect some EUR and GBP supply response to tighter spreads, but cautious about possibility of a flood of new issues as demand for credit is a key constraint
  • The probability of an eventual sharper, sudden spread repricing has likely increased with recent central bank action; may need evidence of a recession (or a major negative event) before spreads respond negatively rather than just drifting wider
Alert: HALISTER1
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

People
Jim Reid (Deutsche Bank AG)

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HALISTER1: Business Insider: Swiss prosecutors are stepping up their probe into FIFA corruption surrounding 2006 World Cup

Business Insider: Swiss prosecutors are stepping up their probe into FIFA corruption surrounding 2006 World Cup

Alert: HALISTER1
Source: BLG (Blogs Web Content)

People
Franz Beckenbauer (FC Bayern Muenchen AG)
Joseph Blatter (FIFA)
Louis Dreyfus (Le Nouvel Observateur du Monde SA)
Mohamed Bin Hammam (Usas Yatirimal Holding AS)
Nelson Mandela (Republic of South Africa)

Topics
World Cup
World Football

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