Just look at the news – Italy is not so sunny anymore: its public debt is >120% of the GDP (double the EU maximum) and its coalition government plans to borrow 1,6% of the GDP this year. On top of it, the bad news keeps coming: a Genova bridge collapsed in August, putting Atlantia S.p.a., the (privatized) builder, under an immense pressure (shares dropped >35% after the news). Fitch downgraded Italy’s economic outlook from “stable” to “negative” at the beginning of September.
But are these bad news as dramatic as they might seem? At Friday’s closing (Oct. 5th, 2018), the FTSE Italia All-Share index stayed relatively stable at 22,455. It started the year 9% higher – with a huge volatility accompanying it (in May it reached 26,737 before the political instability triggered a sell-off and a drop to 23,637 in a few days). OECD forecasts a 1,1% GDP increase in 2019 (vs. a 1,4% in 2018) – which is still growth.
Furthermore, looking at the long-term picture, things are somehow different. In 2016 (only 2 years ago), FTSE Italia was at around 19,000, with politics taking its toll again. A 25% increase in an index in 2 years is not bad I would say. What is a true dragger (and a warning for the would-be investors, especially the short-term ones), is the volatility in shares, as the FTSE All -Shares Italy demonstrates.
With all these variations, my opinion is that Italy’s companies are not so much worse after three years of political changes. Sure, the construction sector and the oil and gas giants (ENI, SNAM etc) are suffering now (O&G especially – due to their exposure to more politically volatile countries – Libya, Iran, Blue Stream etc). The banks (Intesa SanPaolo, Unicredit) and the insurers (Generali and Unipol in particular) are quite close to the beginning of 2018 levels. The financial services sector had a big shock after the end of 2015 bail-out (with decreases of 20-40% in a few months) and it still has to pick up. The exports, on the other hand, are rising fast, showing that the industrial manufacturers have adapted somehow to the new stagflation paradigm and are pushing into new markets. Luxury and long-term goods producers (Campari, Ferrari, Fiat, Luxottica etc.) seemed quite able to take advantage of the cheap financing and the changing demands from global customers – their shares have seen hefty gains in the last 2 years.