The election that has got markets talking this week, however, is the one for the French legislature called by President Emmanuel Macron after a bruising loss in the weekend’s European Parliament vote to Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally.
The RN is leading the polls for the first round of parliamentary voting on June 30, and, further complicating the picture, political parties representing the French left-wing said Thursday they had reached an agreement to form a ‘Popular Front’.
This has left Macron’s camp struggling to make headway, and is spooking markets.
French stocks are down 4.5% for the week, at the time of writing, on track for their biggest weekly drop since September 2022, with banks particularly hard hit.
The spread between French and German bond yields – the extra yield investors want in exchange for taking on more risk – has widened by 27 basis points this week, and is at its widest since 2017.
Not adding reassurance, Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire when asked on franceinfo radio on Friday whether the current political situation in the country could lead to a financial crisis, said ‘yes’.