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The outcome of the Parliamentary debate in France yesterday leaves the nation in political limbo as its Prime Minister François Bayrou is ousted. The vote yesterday was on the motion that the French Parliament held no confidence in the government’s 2026 budget. As expected, they don’t. Many prominent voices in the market suggested that the passing of this foregone conclusion, and the inevitable loss of incumbent political leadership, would result in the euro losing ground yesterday. In fact, markets delivered the opposite.
Many blamed the upcoming risk created by political uncertainty in France as the reason the euro was unable to hold onto gains triggered by Friday’s non-farm payroll report. The conclusion was that the dissolution of this government would create further vulnerability in the euro. How then did the euro make gains intraday yesterday? The answer is simple: the passing of yesterday’s risk event for France showed this was a national, not European, problem. Credit spreads have continued to widen between France and other European nations, but a wider European sovereign debt crisis shows no sign of materialising yet. Whether this is because of the ECB’s new transmission protection instrument or just down to market forces will remain unknown.
There are now two options for Macron and France. He can either dissolve parliament, triggering an election, or appoint a new prime minister to attempt to achieve unity amongst Parliament. Currently President Macron has shown no willingness to pursue the former option. Throughout France, protests will of course take place in the coming week whilst the nation remains without a Prime Minister and government. To achieve a stable government, any future prime minister will have to first tackle the budget which sees a divided parliament.
Discussion and Analysis by Charles Porter

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