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Spanish Markets Hit by Trump's Renewed Trade Threat

LONDON, July 8 (Reuters) - Spanish stocks and bonds came under fire on Wednesday, after President Donald Trump demanded that the United States cut trade ties ​with the country, escalating tensions over defence spending and the ‌Iran war during a NATO summit.

This isn't the first time the U.S. president has threatened Madrid. On Wednesday he called it a "terrible partner". In the ​early days of the war in March, he threatened a ​full trade embargo on Spain after the government's refusal to allow ⁠the U.S. military to use its bases for missions linked to ​strikes on Iran. Nevertheless, bilateral trade has continued normally.

  • Spain's IBEX fell ​2.6% on the day in afternoon trading, set for its worst one-day fall since Trump's initial threat in early March and making it the worst-performing major European ​stock market index on Wednesday. Europe's STOXX 600 was down 1.6%

  • Shares ​in banking heavyweights Banco Santander and BBVA fell 4.3% and 3%, respectively, while ‌Zara ⁠owner Inditex fell 3.6% and Telefonica lost 1.1%.

  • Spanish 10-year bond prices declined as part of a global selloff in government bonds.

  • Yields on the benchmark 10-year Bono were up 9 basis points on the day at ​3.565%, the most ​since mid-May, ⁠compared with an 8-bp rise in German Bund yields . This resulted in a borrowing premium of 49.2 ​bps for Spain over Germany, the highest this month ​and not ⁠far from late March's peaks.

  • Spanish 5-year credit default swaps, a derivative that reflects the cost of insuring the country's debt against the risk ⁠of default, ​rose to a one-month high of 15.6 ​bps, still well below the four-month highs above 21 bps observed in March, according ​to S&P Global Market Intelligence data.

Reporting by Amanda Cooper; Editing by Andrei Khalip

Source: Reuters


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