Italy's Bond Market Under Strain: Middle East Conflict and Energy Costs Fuel Fiscal Concerns

April 13, 2026
Italy's Bond Market Under Strain: Middle East Conflict and Energy Costs Fuel Fiscal Concerns
  • Italy’s bond market remains under pressure from the Middle East conflict, higher energy costs, and political uncertainty, with two-year yields jumping in March—the largest monthly rise since 2022.

  • The 10-year Italian-German yield gap has surpassed 100 basis points, signaling a higher risk premium on Italian debt amid fragile global risk sentiment.

  • Overall, the outlook for Italy’s bonds is fragile as geopolitical tensions, weak growth, and political noise cloud prospects.

  • Analysts expect elevated deficits around 3.5% of GDP in 2026, and warn that investor confidence may not fully rebound even if tensions ease.

  • As elections approach, fiscal discipline may loosen and offset any benefits from cooling market tensions.

  • Meloni and Finance Minister Giorgetti have urged the EU to suspend budget rules amid the Middle East conflict, but EU appetite for loosening remains limited.

  • Calls to suspend EU budget rules have been voiced by government officials, yet responses from Brussels have largely been dismissive.

  • With energy-price pressures, officials stress the possibility of suspending EU rules, raising the risk of higher deficits.

  • Political pressure and energy costs could loosen fiscal discipline, potentially widening the deficit if EU rules are relaxed.

  • Analysts warn Meloni and Giorgetti may seek looser fiscal policy to maintain support, potentially pushing deficit beyond targets.

  • Economists caution that measures to appease voters could loosen fiscal policy amid energy-price pressures.

  • Fuel for tensions stems from US-Iran dynamics after failed peace talks, with broad implications for risk sentiment.

Summary based on 8 sources


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