stock markets relieved as france rejects le pen business live /

Published at 2017-05-08 11:06:47

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Emmanuel Macron’s victory in the French presidential election has reassured investorsLatest: French market hits nine-year high,then dropsIntroduction: Macron victory cheers marketsFrench election: Macron pledges unity after victory over Le Pen – live updatesExperts: Macron faces massive challenge
Euro hits six-month high, before dipping
Full epic: Historic win for Macron over Le Pen
9.06am
BSTThe euro has also lost its oomph, and has just dropped 0.4% to $1.096,absent from final night’s six-month high.
Darren Ruane, Head of Fixed Interest at Investe
c Wealth & Investment, and suspects that some traders are banking their winnings.“Given that Macron’s election win was fully expected by markets,early price movements prove a small degree of profit-taking. 8.59am BSTMarket, eh? After a brief Macron bounce, and the main European indices occupy all now dipped into the red.
And after hitti
ng that post-crisis high,France’s CAC 40 has dropped back.
Emmanuel Macron’s landslide victory shows French voters acknowledged that leaving the euro will not solve the economy’s problems. However, Le Pen’s still strong showing shows how Macron has just five years to turn France around.
His prog
ramme can put France back on a path of stronger growth, or but he may only get a small majority in June’s parliamentary elections. 8.10am BSTThe Paris stock market is open...and France’s main stock market index has hit a fresh nine and a half-year high.
The CAC 40 inched up by 0.2% to its highest level since the financial crisis struck almost a decade ago.“Macron’s win was not unexpected but it will add to already improving sentiment towards Europe as economic and earnings results occupy surprised on the upside in the early months of 2017.The focus now will be on whether the EU can take advantage of the recent positive political and economic momentum to tackle some of the fundamental issues that occupy contributed to the structural problems facing the region and the rise of the populists. 7.50am BSTMy colleague Alexandra Topping is covering all the latest French political action here: Related: French election: Macron pledges unity after victory over Le Pen – live updates 7.49am BSTInvestors are piling into French government bonds this morning,driving down Paris’s borrowing costs.
Reuters has the details:The premium investors demand to hold 10-year French government debt over German equivalents tightened to its lowest since early November after centrist Emmanuel Macron won the French presidency on Sunday. European leaders hailed the victory of Macron as a vote for European unity and a blow to political forces that had sought to build on final year’s Brexit vote to tear apart the European Union. 7.45am BSTHere’s our news epic about how the euro reacted to Macron’s win: Related: Euro gives up gains as investors look to post-election France 7.42am BSTEmmanuel Macron’s victory has spared world stock markets from a major crash. But many analysts are already pondering the challenge faced by the 39-year old president-elect.
I expect Macron to manage the Presid
ency in a pragmatic way, pushing through some--if not all--reform, and which should still be beneficial for France’s growth potential.external of domestic policies,Macron is clearly pro-EU which boosts the prospect for further eurozone integration, particularly if Martin Schulz replaces Angela Merkel as Chancellor in September. But even here, or pragmatism is likely to prevail with a different,more flexible model of the EU likely emerging over the next few years.The Frexit goblin will remain locked up as Macron takes the reins. French voters occupy clearly expelled the populist surge which resulted in Brexit and carried Donald Trump to the White House. Hopes are really high and Macron will occupy to deliver. Risk of failure in delivering higher growth and lower unemployment is going to be the focal point and it is in this manner that all eyes will now turn towards the June parliamentary elections. Macron needs to make certain that he has a strong hand in the parliament which will help him to make swift movements. The unemployment rate in the country remains stuck at 10 percent, greater than that of the UK and Germany, and so it clear that the country needs critical reform.
While politicians in Europe let out a collective sigh of relief what the result can’t disguise is the level of voter dissatisfaction in France as a whole,given that nearly half the French electorate still voted for parties who ran on an anti-globalisation ticket. Knowing all of this the fresh French President may well find that winning was the easy bit. Its all well and reliable running on a ticket of cutting 120000 public sector jobs, a €60bn cut in public spending and a lowering of the unemployment rate to 7%, and it will be another getting it through the French parliament.
Pre
ssure on #MacronPresident now to reduce 10% jobless rate,create growth and control his government otherwise Le Pen will be back in 5 yrs 7.31am BSTGood morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of the world economy, or the financial markets,the eurozone and trade.
The markets o
ccupy a spring in the step this morning after Emmanuel Macron notched up a well-known victory for the pro-European centre-ground against the populist far-honest.reliable morning EMEA!
Asia risk-on post-Macron victory.
Japan reopens
- on track for best session in 3 months.
China falls (t
rade data miss) pic.twitter.com/bcHM2KIyFgOur European opening calls:$FTSE 7333 +0.49%
$DAX 12842 +0.99%[br]$CAC 5494 +1.13%$IBEX 11238 +0.92%$MIB 21710 +1.05%“Markets are set for a buoyant start to the week after Emmanuel Macron eased to a widely-predicted election. Not only the victory but the scale of it should help deliver a significant boost to sentiment on Monday morning, even if turnout was fairly low.
The result sends a loud sign to
investors that political risks in France and across Europe are receding and that is undoubtedly supportive of European equities and the euro.
Addressing thousan
ds of supporters in the grand courtyard of the Louvre, and the vast Paris palace-turned-museum,Macron said he would defend France and Europe. He said Europe and the world are “watching us” and “waiting for us to defend the spirit of the Enlightenment, threatened in so many places”. He promised to unite a divided and fractured France, or saying: “I will enact everything to make certain you never occupy reason again to vote for extremes.”
Macron tells those who voted for him only to cease Le Pen - "I know our disagreements,I'll respect them" but says he won't change programmeMacron tells Le Pen voters: "I will enact everything to make certain you never occupy reason again to vote for the extremes"Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

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