Key Takeaways:
- Paris appeals court clears Marine Le Pen for 2027 presidential run
- Election ban shortened to 15 months already served since March 2025
- French OAT yields rise as political risk premium reprices
Key Takeaways:

Marine Le Pen can run for the French presidency in 2027 after an appeals court shortened her election ban to time already served, sending French bond yields higher as political risk repriced.
A Paris appeals court on Tuesday cleared Marine Le Pen to run in the 2027 French presidential election, shortening her election ban to 15 months already served and pushing French OAT yields higher as political uncertainty returned to the market.
"The court balanced the principle of voter freedom against the integrity of public office, and chose the former," said Jean-Yves Camus, a political historian specializing in the far right at the Iris think tank. "The logistical challenge of campaigning with an electronic tag remains significant."
The court upheld Le Pen's conviction for embezzling €474,000 in European Parliament funds as part of a broader scheme that diverted €2.8 million over 11 years to pay National Rally party staff. It reduced her prison sentence to three years — two suspended and one to be served under house arrest with an electronic monitor — from the original four-year term. The five-year election ban was cut to 45 months, with 30 months suspended, meaning the 15 months already served since the March 2025 ruling satisfy the penalty.
The ruling effectively launches the 2027 presidential race 10 months early, with Le Pen leading opinion polls after three unsuccessful bids. French OAT yields rose on the decision as investors repriced the risk of a eurosceptic, fiscally expansionary government taking power in the euro area's second-largest economy.
The Electronic Tag Dilemma
Le Pen has said she would not campaign for the presidency while wearing an electronic monitor, telling French news channel LCI last week that "when you're a presidential candidate you need to have total freedom of movement." The tag confines her to her home at night, with a sentencing judge yet to set specific curfew hours. Weekend restrictions are typically tighter. After at least six months of compliance, a judge could remove the tag for good behavior, which would also require paying the €100 million fine imposed by the court.
If Le Pen declines to run, her protege Jordan Bardella, the 30-year-old National Rally party president, would become the candidate. Polls show both figures as strong contenders to reach the two-round runoff scheduled for April 18 and May 2, 2027, though Bardella's relative inexperience raises questions about his ability to withstand a bruising campaign.
Market Implications
The last time French political risk spiked at this scale was during the 2024 snap parliamentary election, when the OAT-Bund spread widened to over 80 basis points. Tuesday's ruling reintroduces that dynamic: Le Pen's platform has historically included proposals to lower the retirement age, cut energy taxes, and challenge EU fiscal rules — policies that would widen France's budget deficit, already above 5 percent of gross domestic product.
Prediction markets adjusted immediately after the verdict, raising Le Pen's probability of winning the presidency while keeping Bardella as the most likely National Rally candidate. The spread between French and German 10-year bond yields widened as traders hedged against the scenario of a far-right government controlling fiscal policy in a country with €3.1 trillion in public debt.
Le Pen is scheduled to address the nation Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. Paris time on TF1, where she is expected to announce whether she will run under electronic monitoring or hand the candidacy to Bardella. All 11 defendants in the case were found guilty, though former Le Pen ally Bruno Gollnisch called the verdict "a farce and a political maneuver."
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.