By Sara Rossi
MILAN, April 13 (Reuters) – Italy’s economic vulnerabilities are being laid bare by war in the Middle East, with Rome’s heavy reliance on imported energy and the threat of rising government and fiscal instability ahead of 2027 elections taking the shine off its bonds. Italy’s two-year borrowing costs surged 75 basis points in March in their biggest monthly rise since 2022 – at least 10 bps more than peers France, Spain and Germany.
And while a two-week ceasefire announcement in early April has given bond markets some reprieve, Italian yields at around 2.76% remain well above levels traded before the United States and Israel attacked Iran at the end of February.
Even after the fragile ceasefire, Italian debt financing costs rose at an auction nL8N40S0RU on Friday to the highest level since July 2024. In addition, an extended honeymoon period for Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who had won markets’ favour since she took office in 2022 thanks to her government’s stability and a relatively cautious budget policy, appears to be souring. RECESSION FORECAST
Italy is Europe’s most gas-reliant economy, accounting for 38% of its energy supplies, according to the London-based Energy Institute. It is also the European Union’s largest importer of liquefied natural gas through the Persian Gulf. “With prospects for prolonged energy price increases, investors are very concerned about Italy’s growth outlook,” said Commerzbank rate strategist Hauke Siemssen. The bank forecasts that in the first half of this year the euro zone’s third largest economy will suffer two consecutive quarters of falling gross domestic product, the technical definition of recession. Italian 10-year benchmark BTP yields rose around 80 basis points in March following the start of the Iran war, well above the roughly 60-bps increase for equivalent French OATs and a 45-bps rise for German Bunds.
The closely watched premium, or “spread” investors demand to hold Italy’s 10-year bonds over Germany’s, briefly widened over 100 basis points, its highest level in nine months. That makes it more costly for Rome to finance its public debt, which rose last year to 137% of gross domestic product and is proportionally the second largest in the euro zone after Greece’s. Italy’s 10-year benchmark bonds are the highest yielding in the 21-nation bloc.
Analysts say the Iran conflict has served as a reminder that, despite Rome’s claims of improved economic fundamentals, Italian debt remains the most vulnerable in the euro zone to bouts of “risk off” market sentiment. “To me, BTPs are like a global risk proxy,” said Steven Major, global macro advisor at the global brokerage Tradition in Dubai.
