Greece Surrenders, While Euro Banter Dominates

 | Jul 13, 2015 07:53AM ET

Capital Markets were promised a final decision on Greece over the weekend. Traders and investors were prepared for the price gap on the open, and instead markets still have to wait until Wednesday for the ultimate outcome.

After another all night session on Sunday, Eurogroup leaders came to a consensus. Europe would give Greece a third multibillion-euro bailout provided that Greece implements more punishing austerity measures over the coming days. Prime Minister Tsipras had no other choice, but provide complete surrender to European demands or otherwise face expulsion from the Eurozone.

Early Monday morning, PM Tsipras yielded to Greece’s main creditors terms and has until this Wednesday to pass into Greek law the key demands, including streamline value-added taxes (VAT), broadening the tax base to increase revenue, and curbing pension costs if his country wants to receive a third bailout package now estimated around €82-86B.

Euro leaders may be happy that a deal was negotiated, but the reality is that Tsipras and his government have to convince the constituency to accept a package that is much harsher than the one that was voted down in the Greek referendum a week ago. The terms are significantly tougher, which makes it harder for both sides to deliver.