Chancellor of Germany, Friedrich Merz, expressed concerns over the European Union’s plan to bolster budgets through new or increased corporate taxation. Merz suggested that these budgetary measures might face opposition from Germany.
The EU must consider the future budget’s size and manage with its existing funds. Merz deemed it unacceptable to fund the EU budget through a continent-wide corporate tax approach.
German Political Friction
We note the concerns from Germany’s main opposition leader over new European Union corporate taxation. This signals potential political friction that can increase market volatility in the coming weeks. The core of the issue pits the need for a centrally funded EU against German fiscal conservatism.
For European equity markets, this uncertainty is a direct headwind for corporate earnings forecasts. We believe this makes buying volatility an attractive strategy, as instruments like options on the Euro Stoxx 50 index are priced to move on decisive news. With the VSTOXX, Europe’s main volatility gauge, recently trading near 15, call and put options are relatively inexpensive ways to position for a significant market swing.
The stance from Mr. Merz’s party could also weigh on the Euro, as any perception of disunity within the bloc tends to weaken the common currency. We saw this during the sovereign debt crisis a decade ago, where disagreements between member states led to sharp declines in the EUR/USD exchange rate. Traders should therefore consider protective put options or outright short positions on the Euro against the dollar.
Fiscal Pressure on Member States
A failure to secure new EU-level funding places greater fiscal pressure on individual member states, particularly those with higher debt loads. We are closely watching the spread between Italian government bonds and German bunds, which currently sits around 1.5 percentage points. An increase in this spread would indicate rising risk perception, a trend that can be traded using futures contracts on the respective government debt.