Italian 10-year bond yields rose Tuesday to the highest level since the European Central Bank (ECB) launched the Longer-term Refinancing Operations (LTRO's) earlier in 2012. The move higher in yields can largely be attributed to fears that Spain may need a full sovereign bailout and Italy may be in line after the Iberian nation.
More data is due out at 4:00 am related to Italy, as the Italian Consumer Confidence Survey is due out. Economists are expecting a reading of 85.0, slightly lower than the previous 85.3, but effectively a flat month-over-month reading. At 5:30 am, Germany is set to auction 30-year bonds. A weak auction in AAA-rated Germany could cause investors to sell riskier peripheral bonds, including those of Italy. The yield at the previous auction was 2.41 percent.
There is more data due out throughout the week, including Italian retail sales and German consumer confidence on Wednesday. On Friday, data on German CPI, Spanish unemployment, and Italian business confidence headline the calendar. All in all, there is lots of headline risk in the European sovereign debt markets and investors should position accordingly.
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