Greece: Same story, different day
By Ipek Ozkardeskaya

The negotiations between Greece and the EU are frozen until July 5th referendum, until Greeks voice their opinion on whether or not Greece should accept the 3rd bailout package. The latest polls show that the yes-no ratio remains very much balanced. At this stage, there is little visibility on the outcome of the referendum and Greece’s future in the Eurozone.

The over-stretched negotiations and the failure to seal a deal certainly hit the popularity of Syriza. The capital controls and the temporary rupture in banking activity, constraining Greeks to withdraw a maximum amount of 60 euros per day, has certainly been the last nail in the coffin. PM Tsipras and FM Varoufakis are now giving Greeks the heavy responsibility to decide whether the country should accept the EU aid. The timing of the referendum may have a significant impact on the outcome. A part of no-camp citizens may have changed their mind after being choked by the tightening belt on their personal finances. the market gives 75-80% chance for a yes vote.

The outcome of the referendum is however anybody’s guess. Ladbrokes have stated today that 65% of the bets taken have been towards the ‘Yes’ side.

In the dearth of empirical evidence, we only have several hypotheses in hand.

Trading the euro on Greek story is a risky undertaking. The volatilities are two sided.

This being said, volatility means opportunity.

Trading EURUSD would be taking the hit forthrightly; therefore approaching the problem sideways could help curbing the excess volatility. EURJPY and EURGBP, with realized weekly volatility at about reasonable 7.5/8.0%, could be interesting alternative to highly popular EURUSD.

A no vote will not automatically drive Greece out of the Eurozone yet significantly increase the probability of a Grexit and could lead to another gap down in Asian open and push EURJPY down to daily cloud cover (131.53/133.84), renewed downside pressures on 0.70p in EURGBP could be heavy enough to break the thick support. Potential rush to German bund market could widen the core-periphery spread and the European equity markets could take another dive. The DAX futures are then expected to gap below 10800 key support. The Japanese stocks could offer the good escape from the euro exposure.

A relief rally following a yes vote is what could push EURJPY above the 200D MA (137.23) and bring 140/141 back in target. Versus the pound, the 0.70p support could only strengthen following a reaction bounce and initiate a bullish trend toward 0.7200/50, May-June downtrend top.

Markets between rock and hard place on Grexit Worries
By Brenda Kelly

With the US on a half day ahead of the Independence Day we can expect light trading volumes. An elevated Volatility Index and the uncertain outcome of the Greek referendum on Sunday may lead significant ‘risk-off’ over the coming days. The polls offer little information with a very tight split between the No/Yes. If the mere announcement of a referendum sent the markets into turmoil last week then a ‘No’ Vote will likely present even more volatility as it is extremely unclear what might happen from here.

A Yes vote is ultimately what the markets seek and even though the creditor proposal is likely off the table at this point it may help re-open negotiations and this, from a markets perspective, is ultimately a more palatable outcome.

Already this morning, we’ve had Varoufakis interviewed on Irish radio by the excellent Audrey Carville. His belief seems to be that the Greek government has not failed, that its Europe in not listening to reason that has ultimately failed. He has also denied that Greek banks are insolvent and that they will re-open on Tuesday. At this point, bank liquidity over solvency is more pressing and with rumours circling that a mere €500m in cash is left in the coffers of the various banks, one has to question his point of view.

The ECB has sent Constancio to soothe financial markets, reminding of backstops and ultimately attempting to reiterate the Draghi ‘whatever it takes’ rhetoric. Consequently the euro remains higher against the dollar and 10 year bund yields are steady around 0.82%. We will find out how sustainable and useful these soothing words will be come Sunday open.

Closer to homes, the UK services sector continues to be a mainstay of the economy. The pound is slightly higher against the dollar as output in May came in at 58.5 against an expectation of 57.4.

The financial sector is feeling most of the pain in early trade with UK banks shedding an average of 1%.

There are few bright spots :

BP (+0.97%) A better settlement than was expected for BP in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon disaster has brought investors back into the fold. In the face of declining oil prices, there are mutterings of potential M&A activity in the oil sector and some have mentioned Exxon as a potential suitor for BP. I would maintain that the outlook for BP is as a sole company. A share capital of £80bn and a large premium, the company has actually outperformed some of its peers this year. There will be mergers in the sector but I would look elsewhere’

TUI (+1.44%) In a bid to focus on the main TUI brand, the company has sold a stake in a Grecotel. It’s apparently not related to the current Greek events. Russian oligarch Alexei Mordashovis said to be adding to his already substantial holdings.

BAE Systems (+1.21) A broker upgrade from UBS on the back of its attractive dividend and valuation has elevated BAE today. The stock has been in decline since mid-March, falling by as much as 17% since then. With an implied upside of circa 20% from here based on broker ratings and price targets, the company’s independence from the economic cycle may well see near term boost in price.

This report has been prepared by Swissquote Bank Ltd and is solely been published for informational purposes and is not to be construed as a solicitation or an offer to buy or sell any currency or any other financial instrument. Views expressed in this report may be subject to change without prior notice and may differ or be contrary to opinions expressed by Swissquote Bank Ltd personnel at any given time. Swissquote Bank Ltd is under no obligation to update or keep current the information herein, the report should not be regarded by recipients as a substitute for the exercise of their own judgment.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD edges lower toward 1.0700 post-US PCE

EUR/USD edges lower toward 1.0700 post-US PCE

EUR/USD stays under modest bearish pressure but manages to hold above 1.0700 in the American session on Friday. The US Dollar (USD) gathers strength against its rivals after the stronger-than-forecast PCE inflation data, not allowing the pair to gain traction.

EUR/USD News

GBP/USD retreats to 1.2500 on renewed USD strength

GBP/USD retreats to 1.2500 on renewed USD strength

GBP/USD lost its traction and turned negative on the day near 1.2500. Following the stronger-than-expected PCE inflation readings from the US, the USD stays resilient and makes it difficult for the pair to gather recovery momentum.

GBP/USD News

Gold struggles to hold above $2,350 following US inflation

Gold struggles to hold above $2,350 following US inflation

Gold turned south and declined toward $2,340, erasing a large portion of its daily gains, as the USD benefited from PCE inflation data. The benchmark 10-year US yield, however, stays in negative territory and helps XAU/USD limit its losses. 

Gold News

Bitcoin Weekly Forecast: BTC’s next breakout could propel it to $80,000 Premium

Bitcoin Weekly Forecast: BTC’s next breakout could propel it to $80,000

Bitcoin’s recent price consolidation could be nearing its end as technical indicators and on-chain metrics suggest a potential upward breakout. However, this move would not be straightforward and could punish impatient investors. 

Read more

Week ahead – Hawkish risk as Fed and NFP on tap, Eurozone data eyed too

Week ahead – Hawkish risk as Fed and NFP on tap, Eurozone data eyed too

Fed meets on Wednesday as US inflation stays elevated. Will Friday’s jobs report bring relief or more angst for the markets? Eurozone flash GDP and CPI numbers in focus for the Euro.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures