Stress in European financial markets
The ECB and other European central banks are currently changing their policy stance and communication as inflation rates across Europe continue to rise. The annual inflation rate in the eurozone is now at its highest since the inception of the single currency in 1999. As the chart below shows, more than 90% of European countries are experiencing inflation higher than 3% while about half of all economies have an inflation rate in excess of 5%.
With the ECB clearly becoming more hawkish, financial volatility is increasing across the board. Indicators of systemic stress are going up, albeit from a relatively low level. The large crisis interventions and asset purchase programmes throughout the pandemic clearly suppressed financial volatility even as the economy experienced one of the largest macroeconomic shocks since the Great Depression.
Bond markets, on the other hand, are experiencing a return to volatility as interest rates surge in southern European countries, widening spreads.
While the ECB’s enormous asset purchase programmes suppressed yields during the acute phase of the crisis and the pandemic, the shift towards a more hawkish policy stance is inviting speculators to bet against southern European bonds again as those countries have weaker macro fundamentals.
Still, the current fluctuations are mild compared to the 2008 financial crisis and 2011/2012 eurozone debt crisis. Also bear in mind that the recent surge, while concerning, started from an extremely low base; southern European bonds yields remain comfortably below 2%.