
Political chaos leaves France sidelined as investors warm to Europe
Global investors and French executives cite the risk that budget negotiations could trigger another government collapse in the autumn, while pessimism among French households is dragging on consumer spending and economic growth.
Centrist Prime Minister Francois Bayrou has faced eight no-confidence motions in parliament since taking office in December and his minority government is now struggling to find 40 billion euros ($47 billion) in spending cuts for the 2026 budget.
The contrast with neighbouring Germany, whose new government is preparing to loosen historically tight purse strings and pump billions into the economy through defence and infrastructure spending, could hardly be starker.
"While all the other highly indebted European countries - Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy - have taken advantage of years of inflation to reduce their public debt ratio, France - whose deficit is now the highest in the euro zone - is increasingly diverging," said Pierre Moscovici, head of the Cour des Comptes public audit office and a former finance minister.
To narrow the budget gap, Bayrou will have to convince opposition parties to stomach spending cuts only slightly smaller than those proposed in the 2025 budget that brought down his predecessor.
OUT OF FAVOUR
Germany's historic embrace of looser fiscal policy and the impact of President Donald Trump's sometimes erratic policymaking on confidence in U.S. assets have given a boost to European financial markets and other investments this year.
A key beneficiary has been Italy, which has seen the risk premium paid on its 10-year debt compared to that of safe-haven Germany drop towards where it traded in 2010, before the euro zone debt crisis escalated.
But the 10-year risk premium paid by French debt over German is still at 70 basis points, well above levels of around 50 bps seen before French President Emmanuel Macron called a shock snap election last summer.
The French-Italian yield gap is meanwhile near all-time lows, even though Italy has a bigger debt pile.
Candriam's chief investment officer Nicolas Forest said he favoured German, Italian and Spanish bonds and was underweight France, a situation he called "completely unusual".
French stocks are missing out, too.
The blue-chip CAC 40 index trades below where it was before the election was called and is lagging Europe's STOXX 600 aggregate. The Paris index has returned just 5% this year, four times less than Germany's DAX.
Simon Blundell, co-head of fundamental European fixed income at BlackRock, the world's biggest investor, said he had no big positions in French debt and favoured Italian bonds, encouraged by political stability in Rome and declining volatility.
Even if France's government survives the autumn, investors expect the budget squeeze to underwhelm as a fix for fiscal strains and so fail to increase the appeal of French assets.
"Any compromise political parties find will be really temporary in terms of measures, and not great for debt reduction and deficit improvement," said Candriam's Forest.
And even presidential and parliamentary elections in 2027 may not fully dispel the political uncertainty, if no party emerges dominant.
REAL ECONOMY BLUES
To prod opposition parties to back Bayrou's budget, Public Finances Minister Amélie de Montchalin has suggested France could turn to an IMF bailout if it does not decisively grip its finances.
Carrefour CEO Alexandre Bompard said such doomy talk only caused the French to save more, jeopardising a consumer spending recovery that he said was more fragile than in the supermarket giant's other European markets.
"If we have 5 percentage points more savings than other European countries, it's because we have an extraordinarily high level of political and fiscal uncertainty," Bompard told an economics conference in Aix-en-Provence on Friday.
With consumers hesitant to spend, French business activity has consistently lagged European peers this year, even though the private sector is less exposed to U.S. trade tensions than Germany or Italy's more export-focused economies.
"The economy is genuinely struggling, and you can see this in PMIs month after month where France is getting singled out for how weak it is," said Barclays' head of euro rates strategy Rohan Khanna, referring to the PMI surveys of company activity.
Since January, economists polled by Reuters have downgraded France's 2026 growth forecast to 1%, while Germany's has been upgraded twice, to 1.3%.
Brushing aside any prospect of IMF intervention to prop up France's public finances, the Fund's French chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas insisted Paris could no longer put off getting its fiscal house in order.
"France is not exempt from the laws of gravity, so we're going to have to adapt," Gourinchas said in Aix-en-Provence. "We can't fly, we're going to have to plan our landing and make spending cuts." ($1 = 0.8542 euros)
(Reporting by Yoruk Bahceli in London and Leigh Thomas in Aix-en-Provence, additional reporting by Dhara Ranasinghe, Dominique Patton and Mathieu Rosemain; Editing by Mark John and Catherine Evans)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Middle East Eye
9 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
UK charity warned by regulator over fundraising video for Israeli soldiers
The UK's charity regulator has issued an official warning to a British charity which raises funds to support Israeli soldiers over a "distressing" video posted on its website. The Charity Commission said the London-based UK Friends of the Association for the Wellbeing of Israel's Soldiers (UK-AWIS) had 'breached their legal duties' after publishing a video appealing for donations to support Israeli forces involved in the war against Hamas. 'All of the trustees have failed to act in the charity's best interests and manage its resources responsibly by exposing the charity's reputation to unnecessary risk,' the commission said. 'This is a breach of trust or duty, or misconduct and/or mismanagement in the administration of the charity.' The video, which has since been removed from UK-AWIS's website, Facebook and YouTube pages, appeared to show a person being killed as part of a montage of footage featuring air strikes and combat scenes, similar to promotional content produced by the Israeli military. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters However, following a review, the commission concluded that while the footage did not depict a killing, it was distressing and inappropriate for a UK-registered charity. UK-AWIS is the UK branch of the Israeli Association for the Wellbeing of Israeli Soldiers, an organisation funded by Israel's Defence Ministry and closely linked to the Israeli army. Former British army officer Colonel Richard Kemp, a frequent commentator on right-wing media and UK news channels, serves as a director and trustee of UK-AWIS. The charity's stated mission is to support serving and former Israeli soldiers through education and the provision of leisure facilities. According to documents submitted to the Charity Commission, UK-AWIS raised approximately £292,358 ($394,937) in 2023. Within that total, it reported sending £43,000 ($58,087) to support 'the wellbeing of soldiers in various units as requested… with the beneficiaries being primarily lone soldiers and injured soldiers'. UK charity supporting disabled Israeli soldiers hit by £1m fraud Read More » In its report, UK-AWIS stated: 'Some of these projects were specifically undertaken to meet the wellbeing needs of soldiers, many of whom were reservists mobilised for the defence of Israel in the war against Hamas after 7 October 2023. This was the main reason for the significant increase in funds provided to Israel over the previous year.' Despite the surge in donations, UK-AWIS said it suspended the transfer of funds to Israel after the Charity Commission opened an investigation in December 2023. However, the charity resumed the transfer of donations in July 2024, following the submission of its interim report to the regulator. Before the Charity Commission began its investigation, UK-AWIS encouraged donors to "Adopt an IDF combat unit" and advertised "IDF Enlistment Festivals" on its website, which has since been taken down. Charities facing scrutiny Earlier this year, the Charity Commission issued a warning stating that "it is not lawful" for British charities to raise funds or send money to soldiers fighting for the Israeli army. The warning was issued against Chabad Lubavitch Centres North East London and Essex Limited, after the charity received 180 complaints for raising money for a soldier fighting for the Israeli army in northern Israel. The fundraising page, which was set up in October 2023 and eventually removed in January 2024, raised approximately £2,280 ($2,804). From that amount, the charity sent £937 to an individual soldier. The trustees were unable to account for how those funds were spent. But the charity told the Charity Commission that the remaining funds were spent on non-lethal military equipment purchased by the trustees and sent to the same soldier in Israel. Since October 2023, the Charity Commission has opened more than 200 regulatory cases related to the war on Gaza. The commission said the investigations involved charities with different positions on the war. Israeli forces in Gaza have been accused of war crimes by rights organisations including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.


Crypto Insight
10 hours ago
- Crypto Insight
CoinShares secures French MiCA license, cementing EU presence
CoinShares, a major European cryptocurrency investment firm, has secured a license under the local regulatory framework, Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA). CoinShares received the MiCA license through its French subsidiary, CoinShares Asset Management, the company announced on Wednesday. With the license, CoinShares became the 'first continental European regulated asset management company' to be qualified under MiCA, the announcement noted. CoinShares, a major provider of crypto exchange-traded products (ETPs) in Europe, has also been expanding its US presence since acquiring Valkyrie Funds last year. Triple license mix Following the new license acquisition, CoinShares now holds three regulatory licenses in Europe, including MiCA, the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID) license and the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive (AIFM) license. CoinShares said it's the only continental European asset manager with this triple license, allowing it to offer services across all EU asset classes. CoinShares' MiCA license, issued by the French Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF) on Thursday, allows the company to offer portfolio management and advice on crypto assets in the EU. The MiFID license allows it to do the same for traditional financial instruments. The AIFM license authorizes CoinShares to provide services in alternative fund management and delegated management under the EU's Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities Directive (UCITS). A milestone for entire EU industry According to CoinShares co-founder and CEO Jean-Marie Mognetti, the MiCA license acquisition marks a major milestone not only for CoinShares, but for the entire crypto industry in Europe. 'For too long, asset managers operating in crypto have been confined to partial or improvised regulatory frameworks,' Mognetti noted, adding that MiCA has brought a 'clear, harmonised structure across the EU.' CoinShares stressed that its MiCA license enables it to provide services across several EU jurisdictions, with operations currently passported in France, Germany, Cyprus, Ireland, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta and the Netherlands. The announcement noted the possibility of extending the authorization across all EU member states. CoinShares makes moves in the US Apart from cementing its position as a key industry leader in the EU, CoinShares has also been actively working to compete with peers in the US market after officially entering the market in 2023. Since introducing the CoinShares Bitcoin and Ether ETF (BTF) — a futures ETF tracking the price of Bitcoin and Ether — in the US in October 2021, CoinShares has launched three more crypto funds in the market. The list of CoinShares ETFs currently offered in the US. Source: CoinShares The other funds include the CoinShares Bitcoin Mining ETF (WGMI) launched in February 2022, the spot Bitcoin ETF, CoinShares Bitcoin ETF (BRRR), and the Bitcoin Futures Leveraged ETF (BTFX), launched in January 2024 and February 2024, respectively. Following last year's acquisition of Valkyrie Funds, CoinShares has also been actively applying for other ETF products in the US, including a potential spot XRP (XRP) ETF. Source:

Zawya
11 hours ago
- Zawya
Angola Advances National Road Plan with €85M Support from Africa Finance Corporation (AFC)
Africa Finance Corporation (AFC) ( the continent's leading infrastructure solutions provider, has closed and disbursed €75 million of an €85 million sovereign facility to Government of Angola, through the Ministry of Finance, to support the construction of 186 priority bridges and critical upgrades to the national road network. The project, part of Angola's National Development Plan (2023–2027), is aimed at reducing transportation costs, facilitating access to markets for agricultural producers, and creating approximately 900 direct jobs, while strengthening the resilience, efficiency, and inclusivity of Angola's transport system. Solely arranged and financed by AFC, the transaction marks a significant milestone in the €381.5 million financing package previously announced, with AFC serving as the mandated lead arranger on the commercial tranche, and the U.S. Export-Import Bank through the U.S. Private Export Funding Corporation leading the export credit agency tranche. Other key partners include Standard Chartered Bank as the coordinating and structuring bank; Conduril, a leading Portuguese civil engineering firm which is the main EPC contractor; and Acrow, a U.S. construction industry giant as the bridge supplier. This disbursement reinforces AFC's commitment to working alongside African governments to deliver infrastructure that supports inclusive growth, regional connectivity, and economic transformation. "We are proud to advance this catalytic investment that will connect underserved regions, enhance regional trade, and improve the quality of life for millions of Angolans,' said Samaila Zubairu, President&CEO of Africa Finance Corporation. 'This disbursement demonstrates AFC's unique capacity to structure and fund impactful infrastructure projects that address critical national priorities and accelerate economic transformation," he added. The project is expected to significantly strengthen the resilience of Angola's transport network to climate-related disruptions, reduce travel times, and lower logistics costs for communities, farmers, and businesses. It also supports regional integration by enhancing trade corridors and cross-border connectivity across Southern and Central Africa. With this transaction, AFC reaffirms its role as a trusted partner to African governments in delivering bankable infrastructure solutions that address the continent's most urgent development challenges. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Africa Finance Corporation (AFC). Media Enquiries: Yewande Thorpe Communications Africa Finance Corporation Mobile: +234 1 279 9654 Email: About AFC: AFC was established in 2007 to be the catalyst for pragmatic infrastructure and industrial investments across Africa. AFC's approach combines specialist industry expertise with a focus on financial and technical advisory, project structuring, project development, and risk capital to address Africa's infrastructure development needs and drive sustainable economic growth. Eighteen years on, AFC has developed a track record as the partner of choice in Africa for investing and delivering on instrumental, high-quality infrastructure assets that provide essential services in the core infrastructure sectors of power, natural resources, heavy industry, transport, and telecommunications. AFC has 45 member countries and has invested over US$15 billion in 36 African countries since its inception.