Greece Votes No, But Market Impact Yet To Come

 | Jul 06, 2015 02:57AM ET

Greece votes “No” Greece voted decisively to say “no” in its referendum on Sunday. Now the politicians will have to start working to figure out exactly what the Greeks said “no” to, because it certainly wasn’t clear from the ballots. Moreover, even if the Greeks have said “no” to a bailout package that is no longer an offer, what about the voters in the other 18 Eurozone countries? What’s their view on how much money they should give Greece? We’ll have to see what they think, too.

The short answer: Greece tries to negotiate, it gets nowhere, the banking system remains frozen, Greece is either forced to capitulate or leaves the Eurozone Briefly, here’s what I think will happen. Greek PM Tsipras has said he will try to use the results of the referendum to strengthen his hand in negotiations with the institutions, so I expect to see him try to restart talks. Unfortunately, Greece’s economic condition has deteriorated since the last offer, so the institutions can only make a more stringent offer now – which, of course, the Greek government cannot possibly accept following the referendum. Meanwhile, the ECB is likely to keep its aid to the Greek banking system frozen, which will keep the banks closed. The government will have to choose how to keep the banking system going: either a bail-in of depositors or reinstitute the drachma. It could issue a scrip to pay its bills, which would probably be seen as a precursor to leaving the euro. Any of these alternatives are likely to upset the Greeks even more. All the while, time is ticking down to July 20th, when the country has to pay EUR 3.5bn to the ECB or the ECB withdraws its aid and the Greek banking system collapses. If the vote had been less of a majority for the “no” side, then I would’ve expected a realignment in Greek politics and a change of government in order to renegotiate a bailout package. But under the current circumstances, that becomes much harder. I think the odds are that we are headed towards Greece leaving the Eurozone, even if that isn’t what either side wants, because the referendum has limited the Greek government’s room for compromise.

Market impact is yet to come EUR/USD opened with a gap lower, but in doing so, is just back to almost exactly where it was a week ago after the referendum was first announced – not much change. The rate too remained well above the support zone of 1.0820/1.0950, at around the middle of the 1.0820-1.1275 range that it’s largely been trading in since early June. We would have needed to see a break of at least 1.0950 to draw people in, and 1.0820 to convince investors that we would challenge the previous low of around 1.0500. However, people apparently don’t see much likelihood of that any time soon. The one-month risk reversals moved lower, but nothing special. It looks to me like people do not really believe a Grexit is likely or even possible at this late stage. Either that, or they think that it doesn’t matter– that the possibility has been talked about for so long and everyone is so well prepared that it wouldn’t really matter. I’m not so sure.

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