Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
If Trump, GOP win big on Tuesday, then sell euro, French bonds fast: expert By
{Current column}8People have watched
Introduction-- The U.S. presidential election outcome may be too tight to call, but Charles Gave of Gavekal Rese ...
-- The Formal foreign exchange trading platformU.S. presidential election outcome may be too tight to call, but Charles Gave of Gavekal Research believes that if Republicans win big on Tuesday, then investors should sell the and the French bond market as quickly as possible as the single market's economic woes are certain to deepen.
"I have no idea whether Trump and the Republicans really will win," Gave said. "But I do know that if they do win, and win big, investors should sell the euro and the French bond market as quickly as they possibly can," he added.

The warning isn't without a merit. The eurozone is already battling an economic crisis, with France, which faces ever growing deficits and debt, at the sharp end of investor worries.
History also points to eerie parallels between the current situation and the 1980 U.S. election, Gave suggested, flagging Ronald Reagan's 1984 victory, which spurred significant changes in economic policy.
A similar shift could occur if Republicans gain control of Congress, and former President Donald Trump wins the election and follows through with his tax cuts and plans to shrink the Federal government, then the return on invested capital at U.S. companies would likely increase as would borrowing.
"Higher US long rates will also push up long rates in other big economies," Gave said.
This will be a major problem in France, Gave warms, amid expanding deficits and debt without the offsetting compensation of faster economic growth.
"Before long, France will be as bust as Latin America in 1982, Asia in 1997 or Greece in 2011," he added.
Statement: The content of this article does not represent the views of FTI website. The content is for reference only and does not constitute investment suggestions. Investment is risky, so you should be careful in your choice! If it involves content, copyright and other issues, please contact us and we will make adjustments at the first time!Tags:
Related articles
Dow futures little changed as investors await corporate earnings By
{Current column}By Noreen Burke -- U.S. stock futures pointed to a flat open on Wall Street on Monday as investors a ...
Read moreDollar deepens dive on inflation surprise By Reuters
{Current column}(Corrects day of week in paragraphs 2 and 3)By Tom WestbrookSINGAPORE (Reuters) -A sliding dollar wa ...
Read moreGold: With a Week to Fed, High $1,900s Is the Game
{Current column}With ECB, BoC signaling they are nearly done with hikes, all eyes/ears on FedGold bulls may have fou ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- Indonesia to propose limited free trade deal with US on critical minerals By Reuters
- Gold steadies ahead of Fed decision, copper cools from China boost By
- Euro slips further on gloomy data, China's yuan surges By Reuters
- Stock market today: Dow ekes out gain to notch longest win streak since 2017 By
- Asia FX dips as China inflation disappoints, dollar flat on mixed CPI By
- Crude oil edges lower; positive week on disrupted supply, U.S. optimism By
Latest articles
-
Stock market today: Dow ends down on Tesla drag, economic jitters By
-
SEC hints at potential appeal to XRP ruling from Ripple Labs lawsuit By Cointelegraph
-
ECB to ask banks to provide weekly liquidity data to monitor their health
-
Netflix stock falls 4% on mixed Q2 earnings despite password crackdown By
-
U.S. crude stocks up 3.69M barrels last week
-
Activision Blizzard, Tesla and Yelp rise premarket; AT&T, PepsiCo fall By