Central bankers’ superpowers are looking spent 2 Oct 2017 Between taming inflation, fighting the financial crisis and averting a breakup of the euro, monetary policymakers acquired an aura of omnipotence. Their responsibilities are growing and their mandates have turned into a fetish. A painful collision with reality is overdue.
Catalonia crisis is painful distraction for Spain 2 Oct 2017 Despite violent police intervention, the region’s vote to leave Spain is unlikely to trigger a breakup of the country. Yet the political unrest has damaged an already weak government and could strain public finances. Spain’s recovering economy needs a bigger political discount.
Telecom Italia CEO’s job: fix governance discount 29 Sep 2017 The telco named Amos Genish its new boss. The Israeli’s to-do list includes mending relations with the Italian government and clarifying those with shareholder Vivendi – as well as fighting fresh competition. Unless he addresses these problems, TI’s lowly valuation will endure.
Italy gets narrow lead in race for EU naval giant 28 Sep 2017 Shipbuilder Fincantieri has won conditional control over French rival STX, which Paris nationalised suddenly in July. The pact defuses a cross-border diplomatic row. But the real battle will be fought over the ownership of a European naval champion that is now in the making.
Google clears deck for huge antitrust fight 27 Sep 2017 The company is separating its European shopping unit and allowing rivals to bid for ads. That solves one problem it has with watchdogs while minimizing losses and continuing an appeal. It also frees up Google to battle the EU over claims it uses Android to dominate online search.
Southern Europe may miss Wolfgang Schaeuble 27 Sep 2017 Germany’s finance minister is ready to step down to become the head of the lower house of parliament. An insistence on budget discipline made him popular at home but reviled in crisis-hit euro zone countries. His replacement may come from a party that takes an even tougher line.
EU probe may be least of EssilorLuxottica problems 27 Sep 2017 Brussels is polishing its glasses for a close antitrust read of the $54 bln merger of Essilor and Luxottica. But the eyewear behemoths face other headaches, like customer defections and new competitor alliances. By the time the deal closes, its benefits could look fuzzy.
Alstom gains upper hand in Franco-German rail deal 27 Sep 2017 The French group’s shareholders will own nearly half the combination with Siemens’ train unit, despite contributing just a third of the operating profit. Alstom also keeps its CEO and head office. Hefty cost savings and the creation of a European champion justify the concessions.
Fortum price for Uniper implies another bite later 27 Sep 2017 The Finnish power group will offer 8.1 billion euros for its German target. E.ON, with 47 percent of Uniper, is on board, but other shareholders can reasonably expect a bigger premium. If Fortum wants full ownership, it may take more time – and more money.
Macron’s European vision too honest for own good 26 Sep 2017 The French president set out comprehensive proposals to overhaul defence, taxes, social policy and more. Though he deserves credit for articulating Europe’s potential, his detractors have many targets to attack. Candour about EU integration makes such dreams harder to realise.
German vote bodes ill for utilities and autos 26 Sep 2017 Chancellor Angela Merkel may well turn to the Greens to form a coalition government. The party’s priority is combating climate change. Carbon-heavy power producers like RWE and carmakers wedded to the internal combustion engine are likely to be the first in the firing line.
Italy’s 5-Star puts respectable face on radicalism 25 Sep 2017 The protest movement, doing well in opinion polls, has named a 31-year-old lawmaker as its leader. Luigi Di Maio’s cool appeal contrasts with founder Beppe Grillo’s vitriolic style and may win over moderate voters in 2018. But going mainstream could undermine its basic appeal.
Diminished Merkel will choke ambitious euro reform 25 Sep 2017 One of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s prospective coalition partners rejects closer euro zone fiscal ties. A weak election showing has made her own party restive and the right-wing AfD will hound her. Preserving the euro's status quo is the best that Europe can expect from Germany.
Germany’s Caribbean coalition will shake Europe 24 Sep 2017 The country’s two biggest parties suffered their worst post-war election result. That leaves Chancellor Angela Merkel with little choice but to forge a tricky and fragile “Jamaica” coalition with the pro-business FDP and the Greens. It’s a blow to hopes for European Union reform.
Theresa May embraces “extend and pretend” Brexit 22 Sep 2017 Fifteen months after Britain voted to leave the European Union, the prime minister still has no coherent idea how to deliver it. Her proposal to keep things as they are until 2021 lowers the risk of a chaotic Brexit. If accepted, the temptation will be to delay further.
What Carney can learn from Yellen 21 Sep 2017 Fed Chair Janet Yellen showed rate-setters can shock markets even when they stick to the script. That’s a lesson for the Bank of England’s Mark Carney, who has talked up a rate rise this year. Like her, he may have to hike without having solved a host of economic puzzles.
EU aims torpedo at asset managers’ Brexit defence 19 Sep 2017 Europe’s market regulator may be given new powers to prevent national watchdogs from turning a blind eye to funds that outsource jobs to the UK in the hope of luring business to their shores. London-based funds could face more upheaval than expected after Britain leaves the EU.
What we’ve learned about Brexit so far 19 Sep 2017 Britain’s divorce from the European Union is reaching the critical stage where talks are meant to shift from principle to detail. Progress is being slowed by bickering, technicalities and economic fog. Despite the risk of Brexit fatigue, five clear lessons stand out.
Breakdown: Colour-coding Germany’s election 18 Sep 2017 GroKo, black-green or Jamaica? Angela Merkel is almost certain to win a fourth term, but the race to be her partner is wide open. The outcome matters for Germany – and for Europe. Breakingviews decodes the colourful jargon, and looks at the consequences of different outcomes.
EU foreign investment review raises bar for China 13 Sep 2017 Brussels has proposed a pan-European scheme to vet sensitive purchases by other countries. Unlike the U.S., rulings will be non-binding. Even so, the People’s Republic will find it harder to buy up EU infrastructure and technology. It’s another reason for Beijing to open up.