Torches in hand and hounds at their side, the bond vigilantes at Wednesday's Spanish bond auction imposed a heavy price on the Spanish government's most recent issuance of debt, reviving fears of European debt contagion spreading.
With weak demand, the yield reached a high of 5.81% in Thursday trading. Bill Gross, the world's biggest bond manager, put the matter in perspective on Twitter. "Greece was a zit, Portugal is a boil, Spain is a tumor. You can't fix a debt crisis w/ austerity & more debt," the Pimco manager tweeted.
Indeed, Spain renewed its commitment to austerity in the 2012 budget its government presented on Friday. Combined budget cuts and tax increases worth 27 billion euros are aimed at bringing the budget deficit down to 5.3% of GDP from 8.5% currently.
So, was the bond market unmoved by the Spanish government's cuts? Or, as Gross implies, might the cuts be contributing to a sense that the Spanish economy will be sliding further downhill?
Dow Jones quotes the London-based sovereign debt analyst Nicholas Spiro saying, ""Bond market credibility in Southern Europe is now at least as much about growth as about lower deficits."
Spiro's comment succinctly state's the bond market's case against Spain, and Gross' tumor comment suggests the malignancy affects many other players on the economic stage as well. That austerity measures must form part of Spain's approach to international bond investors seems beyond dispute. It must do something to assure creditors it is gaining control of its finances.
Mike Shedlock's Global Economic Analysis blog reveals that nearly 57% of Spain's budget is devoted to pensions, unemployment benefits and interest at a time when unemployment is pushing 24% and the economy is sliding into recession. Understandably, bond investors would be reluctant to lend to a sovereign like that absent high rates and assurances it has an economic future.