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Analysis: ECB faces Italian debt test as politics intervenes
FILE PHOTO: European flags are seen in front of the ECB building, in Frankfurt · Reuters

By Francesco Canepa and Giselda Vagnoni

FRANKFURT/ROME (Reuters) - The European Central Bank seems almost certain to face a test of its resolve to rein in excessive bond yields in coming weeks as the euro zone's biggest debtor, Italy, heads for elections that a rightist bloc with a eurosceptic past is expected to win.

The ECB, in an attempt to cushion the impact of rising borrowing costs on Italy and other parts of the euro zone's south, said last week that it would intervene in support of countries whose debt comes under market pressure through no fault of their own.

With the interest premium that creditors demand from Italy rising again and the country nursing a debt outlook downgrade from S&P, expectations of ECB action seem set to grow as the election campaign heats up and investors put a price on radical parties' economic promises.

But the bank has also said it will only buy a country's debt "to counter unwarranted, disorderly market dynamics" and if that country is in compliance with the EU's economic protocols - including one to keep public debt in check.

That sets out the wiggle room that ECB President Christine Lagarde and her governing council colleagues have deliberately left themselves - and suggests that any bets on an early intervention by the bank may misfire.

GRAPHIC: Italy is too big to fail and hasn't grown for 20 years (https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/zjvqkzwnqvx/Italy%20is%20too%20big%20to%20fail%20and%20has%20been%20stuck%20for%2020%20years.png)

SAFE HANDS NO MORE?

The collapse last week of the government of Mario Draghi - widely viewed at home and abroad as a safe pair of hands - has dampened hopes of an economic turnaround in a country where low growth and high debt have been entrenched for years.

Market nerves have been jangled further by polls that forecast it will be succeeded on Sept. 25 by a conservative bloc that includes one far-right party and two that have promised steep tax cuts and that were openly eurosceptic a few years ago.

Ratings agency S&P Global downgraded its outlook on Monday on worries about the country's ability to meet European Union conditions for securing almost 200 billion euros of pandemic recovery funds, which could prove vital amid a likely recession this winter.

The closely-watched spread between Italian and German 10-year bond yields rose to 248 on Wednesday, just a just a shade below the high hit in June when the ECB accelerated work on the new bond-buying scheme, known as the Transmission Protection Instrument (TPI).