Investment-Alarm: Französische Banken, Telekommunikation und Inlandsunternehmen als Risikomarker identifiziert

Strategen schlagen Wellen in der Finanzwelt mit ihrer neuesten Risikoanalyse.
Französische Banken unter Druck
Die traditionellen Finanzinstitute kämpfen gegen regulatorische Herausforderungen und schrumpfende Margen - während dezentrale Finanzprotokolle Rekordgewinne einfahren.
Telekommunikation im Stresstest
Veraltete Infrastruktur und überhöhte Bewertungen plagen den Sektor, genau zu dem Zeitpunkt, wo Blockchain-Netzwerke die nächste Generation der Datenübertragung vorantreiben.
Inlandsunternehmen: Lokal, aber riskant
Begrenzte globale Reichweite und Abhängigkeit von nationalen Wirtschaftskreisläufen machen diese Unternehmen anfällig für regionale Schocks - während digitale Assets grenzenlose Märkte erschließen.
Die Investment-Elite setzt zunehmend auf technologiegetriebene Anlageklassen, die traditionelle Risikofaktoren umgehen. Ein weiterer Fall von 'zu spät zur Party' für die klassischen Portfoliomanager.
Markets react as political deadlock deepens
Kevin Thozet, a member of the investment committee at Carmignac, said, “France [is] being held back by political instability while Germany is supported by its stimulus plan and Southern Europe is buoyed by EU funds.”
On Tuesday morning, France’s CAC 40 index showed a slight gain, recovering from the previous day. French 10‑year bond yields rose 0.013 points to reach 3.5821%. Yet bank stocks moved lower. BNP Paribas fell 0.9%, Societe Generale lost 1%, and Credit Agricole dropped 0.6%.
Orange, the country’s major telecom operator, traded down 0.2%. Mabrouk Chetouane, head of global market strategy at Natixis Investment Management, said instability is “now part of the landscape” in France. “France has thus become ungovernable, much like Italy a few years ago, when the constant change of governments became commonplace,” Chetouane said.
Chetouane added that with presidential elections not due until at least 2027, the country is avoiding immediate distress. “Investors are passively following the twists and turns of French politics, trying to separate the noise from the signal,” he said.
On Monday evening, President Emmanuel Macron gave Lecornu 48 hours to break the deadlock with rival parties. If he fails, Macron may be forced to appoint a fourth prime minister since dissolving parliament in June last year. Chetouane called another dissolution a “perilous path” that would add uncertainty for investors and weaken an already fragile economy.
Bond strategists split on election risk and spreads
Thozet warned that unless the next prime minister is a technocrat able to convince the French electorate of the need for deficit control, the budget gap will stay between 5.5% and 6%. He called this “not a good omen for the French OAT‑German Bund spread.”
Goldman Sachs and Citigroup now hold opposing views on French bonds. Goldman strategists, including Simon Freycenet said near‑term election risks “have largely been pre‑empted” by market pricing after Monday’s bond selloff triggered by Lecornu’s resignation.
That selloff pushed the risk premium to own France’s 10‑year debt over Germany to the highest level this year. Citigroup’s strategist Aman Bansal warned that rising election risks are “only starting” to be reflected in spreads.
He estimated about 14 basis points of political risk premium at current levels, below the 20 basis points reached in August. He said that level is likely to be exceeded if a snap election is called.
These diverging views underscore the challenge of trading French bonds after Lecornu’s resignation. The former prime minister had struggled to produce a draft budget acceptable to opposing parties. He was the country’s fifth premier in two years.
President Macron has now given him until Wednesday night to negotiate with political leaders in a last‑minute effort to stop a deeper crisis. It is unclear what will happen if he fails. Macron could call fresh legislative elections. Goldman still targets a year‑end spread of 70 basis points for the France‑Germany 10‑year yield gap, “albeit with upside risks.”
That implies a possible bond recovery, since the spread is currently around 86 basis points. Simon Freycenet said much weaker growth or a worsening fiscal outlook would challenge that view.
Lecornu’s resignation also means the government may miss its October 13 budget filing deadline, which could force emergency steps to avoid a shutdown in January. The standoff has already blocked efforts to reduce what has become the largest budget deficit in the euro area.
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