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Italy’s new government is set to be sworn in on Friday (June 1). Alongside Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, Matteo Salvini, leader of The League, will serve as Interior Minister; Luigi Di Maio, leader of Five-Star, will be MInister of Industry and Labour…
READ MORE : http://www.euronews.com/2018/05/31/ne…
Italy calmer as market turns it focus on trade wars.
Deutsche Bank making all-time lows as it was hammered again due to its U.S. business put on problem bank list. DB is now getting the market’s attention but still doesn’t fully realize the potential problem. Remember, we were there first.
Keep it on your radar.


Stunning! Even God has to worry about being displaced by technology.
Just kidding. Please, no Tower of Babel hate mail from the faithful.
Scientists at Newcastle University have 3D printed the world’s first human corneas. By creating a special bio-ink using stem cells mixed together with alginate and collagen, they were able to print the cornea using a simple low-cost 3D bio-printer. It’s hoped, after further testing, that this new technique could be used to help combat the world-wide shortage of corneas for the 15 million people requiring a transplant.
To find out more about this research visit: http://bit.ly/2JiAMeX
Italy’s president has attempted to broker an eleventh-hour deal between the country’s two largest populist parties to avoid another destabilising national election, helping Italian assets recover from a sell-off that rattled investors worldwide.
Sergio Mattarella, who triggered this week’s crisis by blocking the appointment of a Eurosceptic finance minister proposed by the two parties last Sunday, held informal meetings with leaders of the anti-establishment Five Star Movement and the far-right League on Wednesday evening. FT
Political noise will be elevated in Italy through the summer, and investors and traders should excogitate a strategy and execute it. Discount the day-to-day noise.
Italy’s auctioned 5 and 10-year bonds today,
Italy successfully sold five- and 10-year debt at an auction, bringing some relief to jittery markets following this week’s meltdown in the nation’s bonds amid a political crisis.
…Both auctions were oversubscribed by investors, buoyed by large reinvestment flows from a bond maturing later this week. Still, the pricing of the longer-dated note showed signs of the pessimism that has battered the market this week. – Bloomberg
Check out today’s auction results versus Monday here and here. Note today’s 10-year auction 1.48 bid-to-cover relative to 2.23 in Monday’s auction.
The two major factors to watch are: 1) the polls and to whether Italian voters solidify their support for the euro currency, or harden their positions against it, and 2) if 5-Star and Lega move forward to form a government, who will be the finance minister in the new government?
Increasing fear among Italians of an ITALEXIT as the markets punish the country is the hope bet of many in the EU. Even the majority of the Greeks, during the height of their debt crisis, didn’t contemplate leaving the euro.
“My concerns and expectations are that the coming weeks will show that developments in markets, government bonds and Italy’s economy could be so drastically impacted that they serve as a signal to voters not to vote for populists on the right and left.” – Guenther Oettinger, a German EU commissioner
Indicators
Big snap back in Italian sovereign spread and sharp yield curve steepening. Looks like big short cover in 2-years. Euro banks did not recover as much.
EM mixed. Dip buying algos and traders rewarded in U.S. equities.

Interesting discussion on EM last week on Bloomberg TV.
See our comment yesterday on EM as one of the indicators species of tight global monetary policy.

We have been warning over the past few weeks that the macro swans have been gathering. See here, here, and here.
Swan Watch
The Global Macro Monitor defines “macro swan” as any global macroeconomic or financial event with the capacity to spill over into world markets causing risk aversion and lower asset prices. Today, they attacked.
We don’t know how long this is going to last but it will almost certainly last longer than the cheerleaders suggest. We will continue to monitor the market signals and will try and post a our swan watch table (see below) on a daily basis until the coast is clear. It is a work in progress and will change over time.
Euro and EM Swans
The big swans we are currently focusing on are the Italian-led bond market crash in the Euro periphery and the exchange rate and bond volatility in a few of the large emerging markets.
While gathering the data what stands out the most is the massive and rapid curve flattening in Italy relative to the other periphery countries. Curve inversion is signal of potential credit problems and worries of default. Not seeing that in the other periphery countries yet.
Deutsche Bank
Deutsche Bank, another macro swan, was hammered today with the stock closing in the single digits at €9.82. The bank’s market cap of €20.3 billion now supports a €1.48 trillion balance sheet. That’s a market cap to asset ratio of 1.38 percent. Something may be rotten in the state of Denmark Deutsche’s balance sheet.
Conversely, JP Morgan’s market cap of $360.6 billion supports a balance sheet of $2.61 trillion, a market cap to asset ratio of 13.8 percent. That is a healthy bank.
Keep it on the radar.
The Fed
Finally, lots of chatter today how the Fed will have to slow its interest rate hikes. Maybe, maybe not.
More important is what are they are going to do with their balance sheet?
That part of monetary tightening is on autopilot and won’t be adjusted unless the FOMC takes extraordinary action. We calculate SOMA account holdings on the balance sheet have been reduced by $107 billion since September 2017, including a $87 billion decline in Treasury notes and bonds and $24 billion in agencies.
Also, another $300 billion of balance sheet reduction is on the books from June to December, including a roll off of $180 billion in Treasury notes and bonds and $120 billion in agencies. Nobody knows the consequences of how such a sharp reduction in the monetary base will affect markets, but we may be seeing it in how some of the indicator species of tighter money, such as the emerging markets, are currently behaving.
Stay tuned.



(QOTD = Quote of the Day)