Chinese Imports Fall Faster Than Expected, Gold Rebounds From 1162

 | Jun 08, 2015 05:10AM ET

Greece to dominate the markets this week

After an eventful week last week, the calendar this week is rather sparse. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) meeting on Thursday is probably the highlight, followed later in the day by the US retail sales for May (see below). I expect the dollar to remain well supported this week in the aftermath of the much better-than-expected employment data for May, especially ahead of the FOMC meeting next week. Although few people expect the Committee to move this month, they could change the tone of their statement to take into account the continued improvement in the labor market.

With few major indicators out and the market waiting for the FOMC meeting, the focus will remain on Greece. PM Tsipras’ speech to the Greek parliament on Friday got terrible reviews by the country’s creditors, who according to press reports are losing patience (I’m surprised they have any left.) EC President Juncker Sunday accused Tsipras of distorting the creditors’ proposals and urged him to put forward alternative proposals swiftly to allow negotiations this week. Tsipras may meet EU leaders on the sidelines of an EU-Latin America summit in Brussels on Wednesday. The Bank of Greece Friday reportedly asked the ECB to increase the limit on Emergency Liquidity Assistance (ELA) that the ECB provides to compensate for withdrawals from the banking system. Watch what the ECB decides to do about the ELA at its regular weekly meeting Wednesday. I suspect that once again it will not increase the amount, which will show its displeasure and increase the pressure on Greece. This is likely to be EUR-negative. Note that on Friday, the Athens stock market was down 5% vs -1.3% for the overall European market, while Greek bank stocks plunged 11.3%. This shows that the locals are turning more pessimistic about a successful resolution of the crisis – not an encouraging sign!