Italian shares slide
Friday, 16 May 2014
Italy’s economy unexpectedly moved back into negative territory in the first quarter due to poor industrial results after barely exiting its worst post-war recession, in a blow for Prime Minister Matteo Renzi. The official Istat data agency said on Thursday in an initial estimate that gross domestic product (GDP) had shrunk by 0.1 per cent from the previous quarter and was down 0.5 per cent from the same period last year. Stocks in Milan closed the day down 3.61 per cent at 20,419.62 points after starting the trading day in positive territory as analysts had predicted a meagre recovery would continue in the first three months. It was the worst-performing of Europe’s main stock markets. The differential or spread between the interest on Italian 10-year-government bonds and benchmark German ones also widened to 184 basis points from 154 on Wednesday, indicating growing investor unease. Nicola Borri, a professor of macroeconomics at Rome’s LUISS university, said: This is clearly bad news. In the last quarter we saw a slight return to growth and thought it was the beginning of a recovery but the hope for a return to growth is on freeze,’ he said, according to AFP.