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Anxiety Dissipates After First Ballot: French Election Monitor

Anxiety Dissipates After First Ballot: French Election Monitor

(Bloomberg) -- Risk gauges across asset classes captured the sense of relief that washed over markets after centrist Emmanuel Macron won the most votes in the first round of France’s presidential elections.

A snap Ipsos survey suggested Macron enjoyed a 20 percentage point lead over runner-up Marine Le Pen ahead of the May 7 run-off. Investors had built up hedges over the past few weeks on concern the far-right candidate with an anti-euro platform had a path to victory. Risk metrics may continue to remain relatively elevated before the final vote after traders got it wrong going into the Brexit referendum and U.S. elections last year.

Here’s a look at what market indicators show:

Anxiety Dissipates After First Ballot: French Election Monitor

French notes outperformed Monday, with the premium investors demand to hold the country’s two-year bonds relative to German bunds at the lowest in more than a month.

Anxiety Dissipates After First Ballot: French Election Monitor

The cost to protect against French sovereign risk slid to the lowest since November, shrinking the difference versus German default swaps. Le Pen has pledged to redenominate French debt into a new local currency if she won power.

Anxiety Dissipates After First Ballot: French Election Monitor

Bullish bets on the yen fell as Macron’s massive lead in polls ahead of the final-round vote reduced anxiety over the future of the common currency, options showed.

Anxiety Dissipates After First Ballot: French Election Monitor

Derivatives tracking high-yield bonds and investment-grade banks gained.

Anxiety Dissipates After First Ballot: French Election Monitor

The cost of hedging against declines in the Euro Stoxx 50 Index headed for its biggest drop ever as stocks jumped.

--With assistance from Cecile Vannucci

To contact the reporter on this story: V. Ramakrishnan in London at rvenkatarama@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Samuel Potter at spotter33@bloomberg.net, Brendan Walsh, Tracy Alloway