Could Italy's Banking Crisis Drag Down Mario Draghi?
Authored by Don Quijones via WolfStreet.com,
Just don’t mention “Antonveneta.”
Authored by Don Quijones via WolfStreet.com,
Just don’t mention “Antonveneta.”
Yesterday's China stock market rout, in which the Shanghai Composite tumbled the most since June 2016 to three month lows, and which prompted traders to question the dedication of Beijing's plunge protection team, appears to have been forgotten, with the Composite closing unchanged on Friday after some early session weakness, as Chinese yields declined broadly across the board from 3 years highs.
S&P 500 futures are higher, continuing on yesterday's momentum, after European and Asian shares also rose alongside a rebound in oil, as the year-end performance chase appears to be accelerating. There were several different moving parts in a mixed European session, in which early Euro strength gave way to weakness...
... which in turn pushed the Stoxx 600 and US index futures higher, rising above yesterday's session high on negligible volumes.
US index futures are unchanged, having recovered virtually all overnight session losses alongside the EURUSD following Merkel's failure to form a government, while European shares rise despite Angela Merkel's failure to form a new government. In the span of just hours, the goalseeked "hot take" consensus was that Germany’s collapsed coalition talks aren’t expected be a deal breaker for European equities due to the "strength of the German economy."
Submitted by GoldCore
It is the 'opinion of the European Central Bank' that the deposit protection scheme is no longer necessary:
'covered deposits and claims under investor compensation schemes should be replaced by limited discretionary exemptions to be granted by the competent authority in order to retain a degree of flexibility.'