Mr Monti, Mrs Merkel and Mr Sarkozy are due to meet in Strasbourg
Italy's Mario Monti is meeting Germany's Angela Merkel and France's Nicolas Sarkozy later, for the first time since Mr Monti took office.
They are unlikely to only be talking about Italy. Germany and France currently disagree about whether bonds should be issued by the whole of the eurozone instead of individual countries.
On Wednesday, Germany sold just 3.6bn euros ($4.8bn; £3bn) worth of 10-year bonds, from 6bn euros on offer.
"In my conversations with analysts, traders and officials I'm finding more and more of them are talking about the end game for the euro. Not the end, necessarily, but a moment of truth very soon that will either force a big leap forward, or a wrenching break-up," said BBC economics editor Stephanie Flanders.
"Even Germany cannot be a safe haven if this crisis goes critical."
On Wednesday, European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso launched a consultation on whether the 17 eurozone countries could issue joint stability bonds.
But Mr Barroso stressed that the creation of the bonds would require much greater scrutiny of the budgets and economic policies of individual members.
Germany opposes both the issuing of joint bonds and greater involvement for the European Central Bank in bailing out troubled economies.
Its government is concerned that joint bonds would reduce pressure on member states to reduce their debt burdens.
There has been much discussion of the implications of the failure to place all of the German bonds on offer in Wednesday's auction.
It may be that demand for low-yielding bonds is limited or that it was a result of the Bundesbank taking an unusual approach to pricing its bonds.
"But nearly everybody thinks the auction does not bode well," Stephanie Flanders concluded.
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