The City of London woke to a peculiar scent of Schadenfreude this morning as Germany suffered what can only be described as a diplomatic default at the United Nations Security Council. The proposed resolution, which aimed to condemn Russia over alleged election interference in a former Soviet state, collapsed faster than a junk bond during a liquidity crisis. Russia, predictably, blamed the West for the debacle. But the real story here is the market signal: Germany's soft power is depreciating faster than the euro against the dollar.
Let me be clear: this was not a failure of policy. This was a failure of leverage. Germany came to the table with weak negotiating capital. It has spent years funding Russian gas pipelines and exporting luxury cars while Paris and London watched. Now Berlin expects to call in favours? In the brutal arena of international diplomacy, you cannot run a current account surplus on security and expect others to pay the bill.
Meanwhile, the UK held the line. What a contrast. London's stance was, to use a market term, 'bought and paid for' with actual defence spending commitments. The UK's GDP allocation to military is tight but credible. Germany's is a joke. The market is now pricing in a risk premium on German bunds relative to gilts. Watch the spread widen. Capital flight from the eurozone is accelerating as investors seek fiscal discipline.
Inflation expectations remain elevated. The Bank of England will be watching this geopolitical ripple. A weaker Germany means a weaker euro, which means imported inflation for the UK. But the old lady of Threadneedle Street is probably smiling behind her brick walls. The pound is strengthening against the euro this morning. That is the market's vote of confidence in British fiscal responsibility.
The real lesson? In this low-growth, high-debt world, credibility is the only currency that matters. Germany just discovered it is overdrawn.
As the FTSE opens flat with a defensive tilt, the real action is in the forex markets. Sterling-euro volatility has spiked. Options traders are pricing in a 15% chance of a German sovereign credit rating downgrade within six months. That is not a typo. The financial equivalent of a diplomatic catastrophe.
So what does the prudent investor do? Sell bunds. Buy gilts. And remember: in the casino of global politics, the house always wins. Today, the house is in London.










