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Business / World Business

Italian banks sink on early election worries

Published: 29 May 2017 - 11:01 pm | Last Updated: 08 Nov 2021 - 05:20 pm
British Prime Minister Theresa May shakes hand with Matteo Renzi during a meeting in Rome, July 27, 2016 (REUTERS / Remo Casilli). Sterling, hammered by a slump for Prime Minister Theresa May's Conservatives in opinion polls last week, recovered after wee

British Prime Minister Theresa May shakes hand with Matteo Renzi during a meeting in Rome, July 27, 2016 (REUTERS / Remo Casilli). Sterling, hammered by a slump for Prime Minister Theresa May's Conservatives in opinion polls last week, recovered after wee

Reuters

London:  Concern over Italy's banks and Britain's national election dominated holiday-thinned European financial markets yesterday, from back off two-year highs.
Sterling, hammered by a slump for Prime Minister Theresa May's Conservatives in opinion polls last week, recovered after weekend polls confirmed the trend but showed her still on course to win next week's vote.
European share prices were lower overall, but Italian banks and blue chips fell as worries over recapitalisations of regional Italian lenders bled over into a second week.
"The risk of early elections has suddenly increased to 60 percent," LC Macro Advisers founder Lorenzo Codogno said. "A hung parliament is thus the most likely outcome."
European blue chips .STOXXE overall slipped 0.2 percent, but losses for Banco BPM, Unicredit and others drove a 3.4 percent loss for Italy's banking index - its biggest in nearly four months .
Milan's main blue-chip index fell almost 2 percent, while Germany's DAX was little changed.
Asian markets were also lower overall after some early gains that largely shrugged off another missile launch by North Korea, the broad MSCI index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan  dipping 0.2 percent.
Japan's Nikkei edged up 0.2 percent while Australian shares fell as much as 0.8 percent, hit by another round of falls in the prices of oil and other commodities. China's markets are also closed yesterday and Tuesday for a holiday. On currency markets, the dollar was flat, trading at $1.1185 per euro and 111.35 yen after steadying on a better batch of US economic data on Friday that solidified expectations of a rise in official interest rates next month.
San Francisco Federal Reserve President John Williams said in Singapore on Monday that medium-term trends in U.S. inflation remained "pretty favourable," despite some recent soft consumer price data.