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What happens if Berlusconi wins?

 
 
* Polls appear to confirm that the Monte Paschi scandal has tightened the Italian election
* We still think the centre-left will take the lower house, but with a slightly reduced degree of certainty
* European policymakers are beginning to take the possibility of a Berlusconi win more seriously (although we still think it is unlikely)
* We look at possible scenarios for the region if he is able to capitalise on recent momentum and close the gap
 
Before the Monte Paschi (MPS) scandal, Italy was set for a close election on Feb 24th/25th but there seemed to be little likelihood of Silvio Berlusconi closing the gap in the lower house, with polls showing the centre-left at least 8-10 points ahead. Over the past week the scandal has helped narrow the gap to 5-6 points in the national polls, which we consider to be in the danger zone. While six points may be considered a comfortable lead in many countries, Italian polling has historically underestimated support for Berlusconi by around 3%. This is as a result of voters feeling uncomfortable about revealing their preferences to pollsters; the effect could be even more pronounced in this election cycle (given the concerns around a Berlusconi victory), and may be worth around 4 points – if the polls are not displaying existing bias. On that basis, we would estimate the centre-left to hold a real lead somewhere in the 1-3% range; well below the margin of comfort (see chart).
 
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However, the accuracy of some polling could be questioned, since many of the polls available are connected to the Berlusconi press and the possibility of bias exists. There is also evidence that polls at regional level (for Senate votes) are showing an increase in support for the centre-left, suggesting that any pro-Berlusconi trend is not uniform. However, regardless of the absolute levels; the direction the polls are travelling in (at least for the lower house) appears to be clearly in favour of Berlusconi.
 
Risks rising too close for comfort?
It is possible that the impact of the MPS scandal, and recent positioning by Berlusconi (including veiled bids for far-right support, and a populist position on tax) could prove short-lived. However, to have more clear comfort on a centre-left win we would need to see the gap beginning to widen again in the coming days. This is unlikely to happen; no more official polls will be made available after February 8th, so it will be unclear precisely how much momentum Berlusconi has gained, and whether the trajectory of voter intentions will continue to move in his favour. Two set-piece events in the courts may muddy the waters even more; there is to be are a further hearing on the MPS scandal on Feb 20th (which could set the tone for the final days of the campaign), as well as a hearing in one of Berlusconi’s own trials. Overall however, the MPS events, and the way in which they have been reflected in polling data over the past week, lead us to shorten the odds on Berlusconi closing the gap on the centre-left. A recent dip in support for Monti and a poll boost for the radical 5 star movement complete a challenging picture for the centre and centre-left.
 
Sticking with our call
Despite this movement, the choice of outcomes still looks much as we anticipated last month. If the centre-left manage to hang on in the lower house as we expect, they should also be able to patch together a deal with Monti and the centrists in the Senate. The lower house is essentially winner takes all (55% of seats to the first placed party), while the Senate uses the same system on a region by region basis. Our analysis still shows that Berlusconi is very unlikely to win control of the Senate without the kind of nationwide performance which would also hand him the Chamber, especially as regional polls show him further behind (see ‘Italian election: expect short-term relief, long-term doubts’). We continue to think Berlusconi is likely to secure a powerful voice in both houses but will fail to reach a governing majority (see charts below).
 
But, what if…..?
Like us, European policymakers have (so far) regarded a Berlusconi victory as a tail-risk event, but they are now increasingly focused on the need to prepare for such a potential outcome. Concentrating their minds is a possible worse-case scenario, the ‘bad’ trajectory which we lay out below. We also lay out a more likely trajectory of events as we think they might unfold if Berlusconi were to win.
 
A bad trajectory
The worst fear for regional policymakers is that a Berlusconi victory, if managed poorly, results in heavy market pressure on Italy - ultimately forcing it to seek an ESM-ECCL package as a precursor to activating the OMT. German MPs would then be forced to vote on a support package that opened the door to ECB intervention for Italy with all of their moral hazard questions remaining unanswered (and with a Berlusconi Government the recipient of any support). Voters in Germany would be left asking serious questions about the OMT (effectively being faced with the evidence of what the ECB commitment can mean) and punish the Chancellor accordingly. Add in the (currently rather remote) fear of Draghi being further damaged by the MPS scandal and there is a risk of a very damaging hit to sentiment and to the prospects of Chancellor Merkel’s reelection. We think this is unlikely to happen; but it is the scenario that policymakers are focused on avoiding.
 
A more likely trajectory
We think any scenario in which Berlusconi wins is unlikely to be positive for the broader region, but it is unlikely to be as damaging as the worse case scenario. All sides have an interest in compromise and managing the fallout; not least Berlusconi himself who will not want to have his election greeted with a major sell off in financial markets. We think there is a strong chance that he will seek to lead behind more consensus candidates (and may even try to persuade Monti to stay on). Berlusconi would obviously retain enormous influence over the policy direction any incoming Government might take, but has already indicated that he would take the Economy Ministry rather than the premiership. We would expect a significantly less hostile approach towards the rest of the region than we have seen so far on the campaign trail, Berlusconi would likely come back towards the centre-ground on his engagement with Germany in particular.
 
For their part, German policymakers are likely to play ball with such an approach. No one in Europe would be more concerned about a Berlusconi victory than Chancellor Merkel, who has her own tough campaign leading up to the election in September. Moral hazard issues around the OMT and Italy will be uppermost on her mind. However, we would also expect a conciliatory approach in the near-term; Germany will have a strong interest in making sure that the situation doesn’t get out of control and will likely take constructive steps near-term (especially if there are other Government figures in Rome that the Chancellery feels it could deal with). The Chancellor will need to walk through some extremely delicate ground, too conciliatory an approach will risk a domestic political backlash, but the key objective will be to avoid the form of overt market pressure that could lead towards an OMT request. Over time, a new Government could potentially come to look more like the Monti administration; a fissiparous coalition of interests with Berlusconi wielding (much stronger) influence behind the scene.
 
Both sides would deal, but damage would nonetheless be substantial
Until now, the prevailing strategy from the rest of Europe has been to both hope and assume that Italians will vote against Berlusconi. Discussions are now beginning to take place about how to manage an eventuality that had previously been seen as a remote tail risk. The region should be capable of managing the impacts of a Berlusconi win, but the political costs (particularly in Germany) could be large. At present, all of these outcomes remain unlikely – but somewhat less so than they appeared a few weeks ago.
 
 
Senate results: Estimates, 18th January and 4th February
 
Centre-right
Centre
Centre-left
Left
5 stars
National
110
36
133
3
33
Valle d'Aosta
0
0
1
0
0
Piemonte
5
2
13
0
2
Liguria
1
1
5
0
1
Lombardia
27
5
11
0
6
TAA
1
0
6
0
0
Veneto
14
3
4
0
3
Friuli VG
4
1
1
0
1
Emilia Romagna
4
2
13
0
3
Toscana
3
2
10
0
3
Marche
1
1
5
0
1
Umbria
1
1
4
0
1
Lazio
6
3
16
0
3
Abruzzo
1
1
4
0
1
Molise
1
0
1
0
0
Campania
16
4
5
2
2
Puglia
4
3
11
0
2
Basilicata
1
1
4
1
0
Calabria
2
1
6
0
1
Sicilia
14
4
4
0
3
Sardegna
2
1
5
0
0
Foreign
2
0
4
0
0
Centre plus centre-left
 
 
 
169
Total seats
 
 
 
 
315
%
 
 
 
 
54%
Source: JP Morgan Rates Strategy
 
Centre-right
Centre
Centre-left
Left
5 stars
National
110
35
136
2
32
Valle d'Aosta
0
0
1
0
0
Piemonte
5
2
13
0
2
Liguria
1
1
5
0
1
Lombardia
27
5
12
0
5
TAA
1
0
6
0
0
Veneto
14
2
5
0
3
Friuli VG
4
1
1
0
1
Emilia Romagna
3
2
13
0
4
Toscana
3
2
10
0
3
Marche
1
1
5
0
1
Umbria
1
1
4
0
1
Lazio
5
4
16
0
3
Abruzzo
1
1
4
0
1
Molise
1
0
1
0
0
Campania
16
4
5
2
2
Puglia
4
3
11
0
2
Basilicata
2
1
4
0
0
Calabria
3
1
6
0
0
Sicilia
14
3
5
0
3
Sardegna
2
1
5
0
0
Foreign
2
0
4
0
0
Centre plus centre-left
 
 
 
171
Total seats
 
 
 
 
315
%
 
 
 
 
54%
Source: JP Morgan Rates Strategy


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