France's Macron beats Le Pen to win second term
Second round of France's 2022 presidential election · Reuters

By Saikat Chatterjee

LONDON (Reuters) -Following is market reaction to French President Emmanuel Macron's victory over rival Marine Le Pen in Sunday's election.

With 97% of votes counted, Macron was on course for 57.4% of the vote, interior ministry figures showed

Market reaction:

The euro opened higher on Monday at $1.0852 compared with Friday's close of $1.08095. It then reversed course and was trading 0.2% lower at $1.788 by 0330 GMT. It climbed 0.1% against sterling and briefly hit a one-month high.

Pan-region Euro Stoxx 50 futures fell 1.7%, alongside falls in U.S. futures and Asian shares. [MKTS/GLOB]

Eurozone bond yields, particularly yields on French government debt are likely to dip later in the day on market relief about Macron's win. Yields on benchmark 10-year debt which hit more than seven-year highs last week may dip by 5-7 bps in European trading on Monday.

A widely watched spread between French and German government bonds, a gauge for French political risks, is likely to tighten. It hit an April 2020 high of 54 bps earlier this month.

Here is a summary of analyst comments:

FELIX HUEFNER, SENIOR EUROPEAN ECONOMIST, UBS

"We expect a modest bounce in EURUSD closer to 1.10 in the immediate aftermath of President Macron's re-election. The euro's medium-term recovery depends on ECB policy tightening catch-up with the Fed and other G10 central banks, which we expect to begin in earnest in H2.

"As for OAT-Bund spreads, we see a very modest market reaction as the market had already given up the risk premium following the round 1 vote and the debate on 20th April."

SIM MOH SIONG, CURRENCY STRATEGIST, BANK OF SINGAPORE

"The euro has been dragged a bit lower against the dollar this morning because, with the French election out of the way, the market is starting to focus on other worries, like about Chinese growth. Stock markets are in the red this morning, and that risk aversion has generally benefited the dollar."

VINCENT MORTIER, CIO, AMUNDI

"Victory will lead (Macron) to strengthen the Franco-German couple and more generally the European institutions ... the absence of a change of course will reassure not only the other EU countries but also the NATO.

"But the increasing fragmentation of the political landscape makes it doubtful that Macron's party has an absolute majority this time (in parliament).

"The recomposition of the French political landscape is not over. The majority that emerges from the parliamentary elections will be decisive for economic policy."