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    Italy's borrowing rates skyrocket, Monti scrambles

    MILAN (AP) — Italy's borrowing rates skyrocketed during bond auctions Friday, temporarily battering stock markets in Europe as the continent's escalating debt crisis laid siege to the eurozone's third-largest economy.

    Italy's new government under economist Mario Monti faces a battle to convince investors it has a strategy to cut down the country's €1.9 trillion ($2.6 trillion) debt. The auction results are also likely to fuel calls for the European Central Bank to use more firepower to cool down a rapidly escalating debt crisis.

    Driving market fears is the knowledge that Italy is too big for Europe to bail out, like it has done with smaller nations Greece, Portugal and Ireland. Italy must refinance $200 billion by next April alone, but too-high borrowing rates can fuel a potentially devastating debt spiral that could bankrupt the country.

    Friday's auctions showed that investors see Italian debt as increasingly risky. The country had to pay an average yield of 7.814 percent to raise €2 billion ($2.7 billion) in two-year bills — sharply higher than the 4.628 percent it paid in the previous auction in October. And even raising €8 billion ($10.7 billion) for six months proved exorbitantly expensive, as the yield for that spiked to 6.504 percent, nearly double the 3.535 percent rate last month.

    Following the grim auction news, Italy's borrowing rates in the markets shot higher, with the ten-year yield spiking 0.34 percentage point to 7.30 percent — above the 7 percent threshold that forced other nations into bailouts.

    Markets so far appeared to be giving Monti no honeymoon since he took power a week ago.

    "Mario Monti has failed so far to impress bond markets he has the power and authority to do what is required," said Louise Cooper, markets analyst at BGC Partners.

    Solid returns on Wall Street then helped European markets recover from earlier losses Friday.

    Italy was not the only member of the 17-nation eurozone to have a disappointing auction this week. Even Germany — the region's strongest economy and the main funder of eurozone bailouts — suffered a shock Wednesday when it failed to raise all the money it sought, its worst auction result in decades. Spain also saw its borrowing rates ratchet sharply higher even after a landslide victory for the conservative Popular Party, which has made getting Spain's borrowing levels down its top priority.

    Contagion over Europe's debt crisis also hit Hungary and Belgium. Moody's downgraded Hungary's sovereign debt to junk status, a decision that government hotly criticized. Hungary is not a member of the eurozone, but trades with many eurozone members. And the Standard & Poor's ratings agency downgraded long-term Belgian debt on Friday, citing a threat to its exports.

    Monti emphasized his intention to balance Italy's budget by 2013 and to introduce "fair but incisive" structural reforms," his office said following a Cabinet meeting Friday.

    Monti also has pledged to reform the pension system, re-impose a tax on homes annulled by Berlusconi's government, reduce tax evasion, streamline civil court proceedings, get more women and youths into the work force and cut political costs.

    Olli Rehn, the EU's monetary chief, told reporters Italy's economic fundamentals were "solid" and praised Monti's economic reforms as "going in the right direction" but said more action was needed.

    Monti's medicine — budget rigor and growth measures while fairly distributing the social pain — are "the right ones," Rehn said after meeting in Rome with the Italian leader. "I fully endorse them."

    Rehn told Italian lawmakers they must implement the measures quickly.

    "Over the longer term, productivity will depend on a well-educated labor force," Rehn said. "I am particularly concerned about high unemployment, which is a tremendous waste of talent that Europe simply cannot afford."

    This week's developments have ratcheted up the pressure on the European Central Bank to step up its bond purchases in the markets, though Germany remains adamantly opposed. The current program is designed to support bond prices in the markets, thereby keeping a lid on the borrowing rates.

    So far, the ECB has been buying limited amounts of bonds and has to sell an equivalent amount of assets. The ECB said Monday it bought bonds worth only €4.5 billion ($6 billion) last week, down from €9.5 billion ($12.7 billion) a week earlier.

    Potentially, the ECB has unlimited financial firepower through its ability to print money and many countries in the eurozone, including France, want the bank to act more decisively to solve the debt crisis.

    However, Germany finds the idea of monetizing debts unappealing, warning that it lets more profligate countries off the hook for their bad practices.

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    38 comments

    • Curly the cat  •  Rupert, United States  •  about an hour ago
      Still waiting for the first domino. The rest is given. The Titanic is going down.
    • Killuminati about an hour ago
      It's only a matter of time before Debt consumes the entire system. It's destined to fail. Watch Zeitgeist the movie.
    • S  •  Santiago, Chile  •  about an hour ago
      Pulled my money out of the market at DOW 12,000.
      Who of you is smart enough to pull it out now before it hits 7000.
    • 2012  •  Atlanta, United States  •  39 minutes ago
      I understand they are going to re-release MAD MAX Beyond Thunderdome as a Self-Help video and guide to the New World order.
    • Yoda 2 hours ago
      Greec defaulted on its debt and the EU defaulted on the promise of the Credit Default Swap contracts that were written to protect bondholders from default. Since Europe isn't following the market rules no one is going to invest in any European bonds. Investors cannot be assured of getting their money back and cannot insure against default. The money is flowing into the US where we at least still have the rule of law.
    • Robert 32 minutes ago
      dang, I only got two cards, where is that third card says "3 card Monti"
    • James 42 minutes ago
      Haw haw haw ... the socialists have no clothes.
    • thinkinthat 43 minutes ago
      The country had to pay an average yield of 7.814 percent to raise €2 billion ($2.7 billion) in two-year bills — sharply higher than the 4.628 percent it paid in the previous auction
      this is what we have to look forward too unless something is done--by BOTH parties.
      notice i said BOTH parties--you can't blame just one party. even though some will.
    • ION486 15 minutes ago
      The Germans are right.
    • Skeptical  •  Irvine, United States  •  28 minutes ago
      This is like being aboard an airplane that's going down because it ran out of fuel. You understand what's happening and why, but there's nothing you can do about it, other than what's you've always done, and that's enjoy the ride. You sold the parachutes to help pay for a facelift.
    • james  •  Cincinnati, United States  •  10 minutes ago
      ok the gigs up.....raise the rates so the country struggles to pay the debt....then when they struggle the banks or whoever raises them more so the banks?...end up owning the country and all its assets.....so who's going to cover the u.s. when the crap starts getting pulled here....stocks will crash....the dollar becomes like the peso....gold...ha...its only worth what someone wants to trade for it....buy non parishables....guns....and ammo....
    • dmoney 16 minutes ago
      I was shocked to learn that both Monti and the new leader of Greece were APPOINTED by the EU, not ELECTED by the voters of their respective countries.
    • Cliff 16 minutes ago
      In 2008, Italian banks turned to Libya for their bailouts. Their government couldn't help them, and they didn't go to the EU. Libya's not an option this time around.

      Sarkozy was the most insistently outspoken with respect to military intervention in Libya. He would have known how this would affect Italy, whose large energy company ENI had major deals with Libya - now in limbo. I believe Germany was Libyas largest trading partner.

      It seems like he had no diffuculty helping to push Italy over the edge, as he has no diffuculty pressuring Germany to bail them out. His xenophobic behavior, overall, is not a vote of confidence for the EU.
    • joel  •  Portland, United States  •  17 minutes ago
      Hey italy,dont let the nwo scam you into thinking your liable for the debt based system that they set up with the world banks, its a scam. The people owe the banks nothing. Money is fiction and there is no debt, just cancel it and refuse to comply to the system and start your own trade. Thats why the supposedly killed gadaffi. Debt is an illusion and so is the system, dont comply. Study trust law and you will be free of the world banks and the crown and the cross..
    • right to work 3 minutes ago
      Are these the same type of bonds that the greece people are only going to pay back half of?
    • frugal is good  •  Wallingford, United States  •  2 minutes ago
      usa could default and end our land and building tax at the same time and become 4 countries with 2 groups of legislators needing checks not 3. we would be a more normal country then. the trade deficit is caused in part because of our extra taxes and goods areharder to export.
    • Pa  •  New York, United States  •  about a minute ago
      Tick Tick Tick................
    • frugal is good  •  Wallingford, United States  •  7 minutes ago
      over 60 here. did corporate accounting for decades. ramifications of default???? gads. no blood literally expected :) phew
    • TRIUMPH 9 minutes ago
      The FULL MONTI in Process.
    • TRIUMPH 8 minutes ago
      Bada bing bada boom.
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