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Italy Sells €4.884 Billion In Bonds, Just Shy Of High Target As Yields Climb

Tyler Durden's picture




 

All eyes were on Europe again today, where Italy sold debt for the second day in a row, only this time instead of 1 year and lower Bills, the Tesoro came to market with On and Off the run issuance maturing in 3 through 11 years. And as was to be expected, with a substantial portion of the debt maturing after the LTRO 3 year window, the auction was mixed, far weaker than yesterday's LTRO-covered Bill issuance, and the maximum target of €5 billion was not met, instead a total of €4.884 billion was sold. Furthermore yields surged compared to previous auctions. "The funding environment is getting tougher for the periphery. Overall we believe the spreads are biased towards further widening although we still prefer Italian debt over Spanish," said Michael Leister, a strategist at DZ Bank.What is most worrying is that the funding picture is again deteriorating rapidly, although not as fast as in Spain, even as LTRO cash is still sloshing around European banks. What happens when it runs out?

A breakdown of the various auction tranches:

On the run:

  • €2.884Bn of 2.5% BTP due 2015, yield 3.89 % up from 2.76% previously, Bid To Cover down to 1.435 from 1.565 previously; targeted €2-3 Billion

Off The Run:

  • €395MM of 3% BTP due 2015, yield 3.92 % up from 3.77% prior, Bid To Cover 3.26% from 2.37%
  • €687MM of 4.5% BTP due 2020, yield 5.04% vs 4.3% prior , Bid To Cover 2.195 vs 2.00 previously
  • €918MM of 4.75% BTP due 2023, yield 5.57% vs 5.24% prior, cover 1.75 compared to 1.65% previously

And despite the auction being largely in line if on the weak side, Italian yield spreads have tightened by a few basis points following.

Some more commentary from Reuters:

Italian officials have blamed external factors - an oblique reference to Spain - for the rise in yields and dismissed suggestions the slow progress of structural reform, including new labour rules, have put off investors.

 

Thursday's auction was seen benefiting from reinvestment flows from 15 billion euros of Italian BTP, or fixed-rate, bonds maturing mid-April.

 

Italy also sold three off-the-run bonds due in 2015, 2020 and 2023. It was the first time since last October Italy issued a bond with a maturity longer than 10 years. Traders said these lines had been specifically requested by primary dealers.

 

The Treasury sold the maximum planned amount of 2 billion euros for the three lines, and the sale was more than twice covered.

 

The Treasury has repeatedly said it wants a lasting improvement in market conditions before it starts issuing longer term debt again. Such bonds have benefited less than shorter-maturities from the ECB's liquidity largesse.

 

Prior to Thursday's sale, Italian three-year borrowing costs had been declining after hitting a euro lifetime record of 7.9 percent in November.

 

Rome has struggled, however, to regain lasting market confidence under a new government led by economist Mario Monti, with key help coming from the ECB's longer-term loans, which have funded Italian banks' purchases of government bonds.

 

With investors fearing the debt crisis could worsen again, Italian banks' exposure to sovereign risks has returned as a source of concern.

 

The yield premium Italian 10-year bonds pay over German Bunds rose above 400 basis points on Tuesday, for the first time since early February. That compared with a level of around 570 basis points at the height of the euro zone crisis last November.

 

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Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:08 | 2337098 ArgentoFisico
ArgentoFisico's picture

Again: It's a matter of crossing your fingers and prey:

Pater Noster qui es in cælis:
sanctificétur Nomen Tuum;
advéniat Regnum Tuum;
fiat volúntas Tua,
sicut in cælo, et in terra.
Panem nostrum cotidianum
da nobis hódie;
et dimítte nobis débita nostra,
sicut et nos
dimíttimus debitóribus nostris;
et ne nos indúcas in tentatiónem;
sed líbera nos a malo.
Amen.

 

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:48 | 2337156 GetZeeGold
GetZeeGold's picture

 

 

O Fortuna
velut luna
statu variabilis,
semper crescis
aut decrescis;
vita detestabilis
nunc obdurat
et tunc curat
ludo mentis aciem,
egestatem,
potestatem
dissolvit ut glaciem.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DlgTpMLoWmw

 

 

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:08 | 2337099 Irish66
Irish66's picture

Nothing to see here, just lemons pass the tequila

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:08 | 2337100 LongSoupLine
LongSoupLine's picture

Boy, that's not good...bullish.

Futures ramping.  Putting on hip boots for another day of walking through knee-deep HFT and MSM bullshit.

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:08 | 2337101 DutchDude
DutchDude's picture

ECB buying yet?

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:09 | 2337102 battle axe
battle axe's picture

Thats right Italy, blame Spain, don't try to clean up your dysfunctional economy that  has been trailing Germany and France for more then a decade. It must be Spain's fault. 

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:17 | 2337111 ArgentoFisico
ArgentoFisico's picture

incredible, right? And it's Portugal's fault too

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:09 | 2337103 Dick Darlington
Dick Darlington's picture

And the brain farts from deputy finance minister:

 

*ITALY DOESN'T NEED FUNDING AT UNFAVORABLE YIELDS, GRILLI SAYS

*ITALY DIDN'T ALLOCATE ALL BONDS BECAUSE DIDN'T NEED FUNDING

*GRILLI SAYS ITALY AUCTION DREW STRONG DEMAND

LOL!

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:21 | 2337118 Koffieshop
Koffieshop's picture

They should sell the Vatican to China. It will solve a lot of problems in one go.

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:09 | 2337104 Bubble
Bubble's picture

Who the hell - that isn't a central bank or someone with a gun to their head - is buying this stuff? If you really want to lend Italy money, why not wait a few months and receive a higher rate of return until you're subordinated?

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:11 | 2337108 AUD
AUD's picture

No matter, the ECB will just LTRO x; x being any number through to infinity.

Former ECB board member Juergen Stark has been quoted as saying, “The balance sheet of the euro system isn’t only gigantic in size but also shocking in quality”, so, nobody gives a shit & the ECB will 'ease' with ease until the day, like a topping stockmarket, it doesn't.

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:20 | 2337122 DutchDude
DutchDude's picture

It'll be LTRO <> QE ping-pong; keeping EURUSD at a soothinh 1.3000 rate... Both economies vapourizing in the process; but hey; Euro AND dollar are strong as ever!

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:15 | 2337114 PontifexMaximus
PontifexMaximus's picture

no problem for the time being, comrad Draghi will fill the gap. Watch for next ECB reporting, I wouldn't be surprised, seeing MD piling up Spain and probably also Italy. Gaining time, but having a market which does not have patience anymore, against him. Last but not least, BB will give him a hand.

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:26 | 2337129 non_anon
non_anon's picture

who's buying this crap, oh, that's right, we are !

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:32 | 2337141 GeneMarchbanks
GeneMarchbanks's picture

Prolly.

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:53 | 2337168 The Swedish Chef
The Swedish Chef's picture

Made me laugh out loud. Thanks for that, kinda needed something to smile about.

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 07:50 | 2337162 The Swedish Chef
The Swedish Chef's picture

The long bond auctions will be what institutes LTRO as a yearly tradition. It will become like a run up for Christmas and a fitting time: it´s when we all get crap we don´t want. After a decade or so with LTROs the ECB will own every crappy asset in the world, then it goes belly up and we have a reset.

Thu, 04/12/2012 - 08:02 | 2337180 i-dog
i-dog's picture

  "the ECB will own every crappy asset in the world"

Those "crappy assets" are IOUs from every living soul on the planet (and their unborn).

Don't expect a reset ... expect an invitation to the nearest 'Arbeit Macht Frei' kamp!

Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!