Morgan Stanley erkender, at mange amerikanske investorer har en tendens til at se på Europa med skepsis, men banken nævner tre grunde til, at Europa er blevet mere attraktiv som investeringsmål: Europa har langt bedre end USA bekæmpet coronakrisen; centralbanken ECB har haft held med at stimulere økonomien; og så viser den nye EU-fond, at EU nærmer sig en finanspolitisk union. Det er alt i alt en afgørende udvikling for EU. Det vil styrke euroen, styrke selskaber i Europas yderkant og mindske rentespændet mellem Tyskland og andre lande.
From January 1st, 2010 through May 1st of this year, the euro has lost almost a quarter of its value against the U.S. dollar. Over that same period, the performance of European equities, relatives stocks in the U.S., roughly halved.
But recently, there have been some important, encouraging developments on the European Union.
First, the region has been relatively successful in containing the spread of COVID-19, with case counts in sharp decline. The EU 27, which has a total population of about 445 million people, has been seeing daily fatalities from this terrible disease in the low 300s. In the United States, which has a lower population of about 330 million, daily fatalities are roughly three times as high.
Second, the region’s central bank, the ECB, has been moving aggressively and last week voted to expand its bond purchases by a further 600 billion euros. The idea of a highly supportive central bank has not always been the case for the Eurozone over the last 20 years. The ECB raised interest rates twice in 2011 and also did so in 2008, just a few months before Lehman Brothers failed.
Third, the region has long been hampered by a lack of fiscal union. In the U.S. It’s pretty straightforward for the federal government to shift money towards regions that are suffering and to fund this with a single, highly liquid security in the form of Treasury bonds.
But the Eurozone lacks such a mechanism. The question of to what extent relatively more prosperous member states, such as Germany, should support those suffering more economically, such as Italy or Greece, has been a question that’s dogged the region for much of the last decade.
That’s what makes recent developments so interesting. For the first time, France and Germany, the two largest economies in the eurozone, proposed a regional recovery fund paid for by joint borrowing, backed by the entire region. And it’s asking that this economic assistance be largely in the form of grants rather than loans, which means that countries receiving the badly needed aid aren’t burdened with significantly higher levels of debt.
Meanwhile, the funding for this aid would be through jointly backed issuance that creates a new safe asset for the region, much more similar to a U.S. Treasury.
At Morgan Stanley, we think these proposals are a significant moment for the eurozone. For currency markets, we think they’ll cause the euro to strengthen. In bond markets, we think they’ll help narrow the spreads between other countries and Germany. And for equity markets, we think they’ll help encourage a rotation towards companies in the periphery and out of the high quality defensive stocks that have previously been driving Europe’s market.