Some 157 billion euros ($203 billion) in debt will mature in the 17-member euro area in the first three months of 2012, according to UBS AG. By the end of that period, leaders have pledged to draft a stricter rulebook for controlling government spending. German ChancellorAngela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy will meet in Berlin Jan. 9 to work out details.
“The road to overcoming this won’t be without setbacks, but at the end of this path Europe will emerge stronger from the crisis than before,” Merkel said in a New Year’s speech broadcast Dec. 31. Merkel, whose first official public appointment is on Jan. 5, reiterated that her government will do “everything” to bring the euro out of the slump.
Ten years after euro bank notes replaced national currencies on Jan. 1, 2002, the euro has for the first time recorded two consecutive annual losses against the U.S. dollar while plunging to a record low against the yen. That raises the pressure on euro leaders as they struggle to hold the monetary union together in the face of credit downgrades, European Union splits and a looming recession that might compound rising debt.
Stocks Rise
European shares rose on the first trading day of 2012, with the Stoxx Europe 600 Index (SXXP) up 0.8 percent as of 3:33 p.m. in Berlin. The gauge slumped 11 percent last year.
The euro slid 0.2 percent to $1.2934 after earlier dropping as much as 0.4 percent. The single currency lost 3 percent against the dollar last year, ending at $1.2961, a decline of 13 percent from its 2011 high of $1.4830 on May 2. It lost 3.2 percent in the last quarter.
The latest crack in Europe’s crisis-fighting plans appeared on Dec. 30, when Spain’s new government said 2011’s budget deficit would reach 8 percent of output, 2 percent more than the previous government had projected and more than the 6.9 percent expected by economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy responded by unveiling a new package of spending cuts and tax increases.
Still, the key to the euro’s survival may lie with Italy, the group’s third-largest economy and the second most-indebted after Greece. The government in Rome must repay 53 billion euros in debt in the first quarter, about a third of the euro area’s total amount for the period, after Prime Minister Mario Monti passed an emergency budget package aimed at curtailing borrowing costs.
Italian Yields
Italy’s 10-year yield ended 2011 near the 7 percent mark that led Greece, Ireland and Portugal to seek bailouts. Spain’s equivalent yield finished the year just above 5 percent. Italian 10-year yields dropped 13 basis points to 6.97 percent today, while Spanish yields were little changed at 5.10 percent.
“If the Italian yields start to rise, you could quickly turn a manageable situation into an insolvent one,” Michael Spence, a professor of economics at New York University and a Nobel laureate, said on Bloomberg Television Dec. 28. “Italy needs time and Europe needs to help buy them some of the time.”
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble echoed that strategy, telling the Bild newspaper yesterday that European rescue funds can only “buy time” before indebted states take “the necessary measures to win back confidence.”
French Possibilities
Sarkozy said that the French government will turn from budget fighting to economic growth and unemployment in 2012, which will be “the year of all risks and of all possibilities,” he said Dec. 31 in his fifth New Year’s address, the last before he faces a re-election contest in May. Sarkozy will meet with Italy’s Monti in Paris on Jan. 6.
In his New Year’s message to Greek citizens, Prime Minister Lucas Papademos said his nation will confront a “difficult” 2012 and said that the “next three months will be particularly crucial.”
Papademos, appointed on Nov. 11 as head of a government backed by three of the five parliamentary parties, is trying to secure loans under a 130 billion-euro bailout for Greeceagreed to in October by EU leaders before elections are held. Measures include negotiating a debt swap with private creditors that will cut 100 billion euros off Greece’s burden.
As Europe’s leaders tinker at a new budget framework and craft the so-called firewall that will prop up ailing states, Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann said that the European Central Bank won’t “step into the breach for fiscal policy.”
ECB Limits
“We have to make it clear where our legal, but also our real limits, are,” Weidmann, who is a council member of the Frankfurt-based ECB, told Tagesspiegel newspaper yesterday.
Fiscal and monetary efforts could be hampered by a shrinking economy in the euro area, which would crimp tax revenues and fuel unemployment. The economy of the 17-nation area will shrink by about 0.7 percent this year, said Howard Archer, an economist at IHS Global Insight inLondon.
“We expect eurozone recession to occur in late-2011 and the first half of 2012 in the face of the ongoing eurozone sovereign debt crisis,” Archer wrote in a Dec. 30 note to clients. “It is vital that eurozone policy makers get a real grip on matters quickly.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Patrick Donahue in Berlin at pdonahue1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Hertling at jhertling@bloomberg.net
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