Market Analysis After Greek Election: Euro Recovered And CHF weakens

 | Jan 27, 2015 04:32AM ET

Greek election – more thoughts Sunday’s election in Greece was an event that will have repercussions for the eurozone for several months. Indeed, given the impact that it may have on other countries’ elections, it could be the defining event for Europe in 2015. Note the strong relationship between SYRIZA and Spain’s Podemos Party, as demonstrated by the presence of the leader of Podemos, Pablo Iglesias, on the podium with SYRIZA’s Alexis Tsipras yesterday (see photo). SYRIZA’s victory may boost Podemos’ popularity in Spain, which is a much bigger issue for the eurozone than Greece is because of the general election in Spain this fall.

Clashes coming The EUR recovered somewhat yesterday, probably on a “sell the rumor, buy the fact” response as the SYRIZA victory was expected. Moreover, Tsipras has been consistently moving to the center as the election approached, and his party’s coalition with the relatively conservative Independent Greeks further reassures investors. Nonetheless, I believe there are more shocks in store for the FX market from the election. The Greek press reports that the new government already has legislation ready to send to Parliament reversing some of the structural reforms implemented in the Troika program. I’m not sure how well that will sit with Greece’s creditors. The legislation could disrupt Greece’s exit from its five-year bailout program, which expires at the end of February, and leave the country’s banks without a liquidity backstop. Greek banks rely on the ECB for funding, but the ECB has warned it will stop providing liquidity unless Greece reaches a new agreement with its creditors.

Debt relief has dominated the headlines, but that really isn’t the main issue. As the FT pointed out yesterday, the maturities are already quite long (average of 16.5 years, double that of Italy or Germany) and Europe may be willing to extend them even further. Rather, the two main points are the fiscal outlook and structural reforms. On the former issue, the government is supposed to be running a substantial surplus before interest payments, but tax collection has plummeted ahead of the election and it is now running a large deficit again. The first question is whether the government will be willing to raise taxes enough to meet its budget targets, or Brussels will be willing to lower the targets. On structural reform, much depends on what legislation is introduced and how Brussels reacts. So far, the indications are that the two sides are very far apart.

Best case: The EU softens its targets for Greece and extends debt maturities further. In return, the new Greek government commits to further structural reforms. It’s difficult to reconcile this with SYRIZA’s platform, however. They could do it and blame it on the need to keep the Independent Greeks in the coalition. EUR would probably stabilize temporarily, but QE keep it under pressure.

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Worst case: No agreement. The various participants argue until July/August, when EUR 6.7bn in bonds mature, and then Greece defaults. Greece either has capital controls imposed or leaves the eurozone. Disaster for EUR.

Middle case: No agreement reached, but default averted somehow. This might need to involve either a new election or at least a change in the coalition members. Even this scenario involves considerable risk for EUR. EUR continues on declining trend as increased tension plus QE pressure the currency.

CHF weakens after the Greek election went as expected or even better, meaning there was less need for safe havens. It may recover in coming weeks however if tensions there mount.

RUB collapsed after Standard & Poor’s cut Russia’s rating below that of Moody’s and Fitch, who were already at the lowest investment grade, and left Russia on negative watch. The rising tensions in Ukraine and talk of additional sanctions didn’t help, either.

Today’s highlights: The 1st estimate of UK Q4 GDP is expected to show an acceleration in the pace of growth from Q3. Given the weak industrial production data in October and November, we wouldn’t be surprised with a below-consensus growth rate. Along with the falling inflation rate, a disappointment in the growth figure could keep the markets convinced that the first rate hike won’t be until after the general election in May. This is likely to keep GBP/USD under pressure.