POWER: TenneT Announced Funding Structure to Separate Dutch, German Ops

Apr-17 15:02

TSO TenneT announced its new funding structure which includes the Dutch state guarantee in order to facilitate the separation of its Dutch and German operations.

  • The aim is that each operation will be funded separately.
  • "As sole shareholder of TenneT, we fully endorse the steps taken to separate the Dutch and German operations. We are confident that the new funding structure, supported by the state guarantee, will provide TenneT Netherlands with a strong financial basis to continue to invest in the Dutch electricity grid, and at the same time enable separate funding of TenneT Germany”, said the Dutch minister of finance Eelco Heinen.
  • TenneT announced in December it plans to separate its businesses in the Netherlands and in Germany from 1 January 2025 in order to sell the German arm of the business.

Historical bullets

US STOCKS: Early Equities Roundup: Interactive Media, Discretionary Shares Lag

Mar-18 15:00
  • Stocks trading lower Tuesday - reversing Monday's gains with major indexes back to late Friday levels ahead midday. Currently, the DJIA trades down 253.37 points (-0.61%) at 41585.29, S&P E-Minis down 65 points (-1.13%) at 5665.75, Nasdaq down 326.4 points (-1.8%) at 17477.72.
  • Communication Services and Consumer Discretionary sectors underperformed in the first half, interactive media and entertainment stocks weighing on the former: Alphabet -4.65%, Meta Platforms -4.65%, Alphabet -4.53%, Netflix -3.06% and Live Nation Entertainment -1.71%.
  • The Discretional sector weighed on by Tesla and cruise lines: Royal Caribbean Cruises -6.05%, Tesla -5.41%, Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings-4.29% and Carnival -3.64%.
  • On the positive side, Real Estate and Energy sectors outperformed in the first half, investment trusts buoyed the former: Crown Castle +2.08%, Kimco Realty +1.78% and American Tower +1.47%. Meanwhile, oil and gas stocks supported the Energy sector: Coterra Energy +2.45%, EQT +2.09%, Marathon Petroleum +1.43% and Valero Energy +1.19%.

GERMANY: Fitch: Pressure On AAA Rating Could Arise Absent Growth Improvements

Mar-18 14:56

Fitch Ratings write that although “Germany has substantial fiscal headroom to accommodate the planned major shift to much larger military and infrastructure spending”, pressure on its AAA/Stable rating “could arise over the longer term if this spending increase is not eventually offset by consolidation measures or a lasting improvement in growth prospects”.

  • The Bundestag vote on incoming Chacellor Merz’s fiscal reforms is currently ongoing, with the Bundesrat vote due on Friday March 21. Fitch expect the bill to be passed “broadly as envisaged”.
  • Fitch pencil in “EUR900 billion-1 trillion (21%-23% of 2024 GDP) of additional government expenditure over the next decade”, with new spending expected to be scaled up gradually.
  • Under this assumption, Germany's debt-to-GDP ratio would approach 70% by 2027, the highest among ‘AAA’ rated peers (median at 36.5%), but still below the 80% peak of 2010. Germany's status as the eurozone’s benchmark issuer and its large, diversified economy also enhance its debt-carrying capacity”.
  • “Our initial estimate is that the new spending could directly add on average about 0.4pp to GDP in 2025-2027, but we expect higher US tariffs to offset this in 2025 and forecast growth of just 0.1%”…. “However, fiscal stimulus will allow the German economy to recover modestly next year, when we forecast growth of 1.1%”.
  • “Germany faces significant structural challenges, including rising competition from China, tariff risks due to its export-oriented economy, and competitiveness issues in the manufacturing sector caused by increased energy and labour costs, bureaucratic hurdles, and high corporate taxes”… “he additional spending will support growth and enhance competitiveness, but it is unlikely to substantially improve Germany's longer-term growth prospects in isolation”.

GERMANY: CORRECTION: Fiscal Bill Only Now Up For Vote, Results Around 15:00 GMT

Mar-18 14:52

The key German fiscal bill on higher military and infrastructure spending by CDU/CSU and SPD was only now up for vote in Bundestag, until 14:50 GMT. Vote collation took around 10 minutes for the last drafts, meaning results should be in around 15:00 GMT.

  • The previous bill up for vote was a second one by pro-business FDP, which, as expected, failed to gain the required 2/3rds majority of votes.
  • Threshold for passing sits at 489 votes in favour.