3 Numbers: EUR/USD Rally Hopes, U.S. 10-Year Yield, Fed Minutes

 | Jul 08, 2015 01:54AM ET

It’s a slow day for scheduled economic news, although the unscheduled headlines will continue to grab the crowd’s attention, courtesy of a certain macro tragedy unfolding in real time. As the markets struggle to figure out what comes next, keep an eye on EURUSD, which may rally if anything resembling a solution emerges from the ashes of the Greek debacle. Otherwise, the renewed appetite for risk-off trades is putting new pressure on the U.S. 10-Year yield. Meanwhile, the Fed minutes from the last monetary meeting will be closely read for fresh clues on evaluating the timing of the first rate hike.

EUR/USD: The uncertainty bound up with Greece has been weighing on the euro over the past month. The latest phase of weakness for the currency isn't surprising, given what's going on in Europe. But if the Greek crisis pulls back from the precipice, even slightly, will the Eurozone’s modest economic recovery (assuming it endures) take precedence once more in terms of stabilizing and perhaps driving EURUSD higher?

It's important to remember that before Greece stole the headlines, a modest rebound was (and probably still is) bubbling in the Eurozone. The EURUSD previously found a degree of steadiness when the upbeat numbers started arriving in early spring. The slide just below 1.05 in mid-March marked a trough, and one that still stands. But the bottom gave way to a rally through mid-May, just about the time that news about Greece began to deteriorate into what's become the current debacle.

The veil of uncertainty is sure to lift soon, however, although not necessarily for encouraging reasons. But one way or another, the end is nigh. "It is not a matter of weeks but of a few days" to keep Greece from a full-blown disaster, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said yesterday.

On that note, the next round of major Eurozone macro releases arrives next week, including the monthly update on industrial production, inflation, and the European Central Bank’s monetary announcement. The question is whether any of those events will be upstaged by the ongoing turmoil in Greece? The answer, of course, has little to do with economics proper at the moment and everything to do with the political headlines flashing across your screen.