Greece’s Tsipras And Month End Demand To Keep Traders Guessing

 | Jun 30, 2015 08:15AM ET

For the remainder of this week, market moves are to be dominated by contagion and risk aversion, but most likely not to the same extent of the recent past. The EUR's impressive rally after the fact yesterday (€1.0966 to €1.1262), referred mostly to investor confidence on how European policymakers have potentially ringed the worst effects of a possible Grexit.

After the initial shock of not obtaining an eleventh hour deal, market moves have since been relatively orderly and fluid, and this despite the nature of this week. It’s a holiday-shortened trading week, dissected by quarter- and half-year end demands, with the granddaddy of U.S. economic indicators thrown in a day early (July 2) for good measure.

Since the initial Greek market shock over the past weekend, capital market moves have been far less violent than in years past, as Europe today is considered more capable to handle the fallout from any Greek turbulence. Core and periphery economies are stronger nowadays. Their budget deficits are considerably smaller. The eurozone has a much stronger financial system and the European Central Bank has more tools at their disposal, like its quantitative easing program, to be far more proactive and aggressive when needed to be. All of this is giving investors some confidence.