On Investors’ Plates: Greece Course Reversal, Chinese Economic Data and a Possible Iran Nuke Deal
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The Greek government has capitulated on nearly all of European demands, seeming averting an unceremonious exit from the monetary union. The Greek parliament must now pass six reform bills that the recent referendum had appeared to reject.
The Greek government has capitulated on nearly all of European demands, seeming averting an unceremonious exit from the monetary union. The Greek parliament must now pass six reform bills that the recent referendum had appeared to reject.
The ECB will meet later today to make some decision on the Emergency Liquidity Assistance. As little as a two-bln increase in ELA may be able to re-open the banks Tuesday/Wednesday though capital controls would remain in place. While it might be tempting to wait for the Greek parliament, it is not clear that Greek banking system can survive until then (Wednesday). Also, note that Greece has a rather small samurai bond maturity tomorrow, and Greek civil servant and pension funds to make on Wednesday.
Greece has been able to keep the government running by falling into arrears (not default) to its domestic service providers. Moreover, the brief growth that Greece had posted in a couple of quarters last year seems to be a greater function of prices falling faster than output rather than a true greenshoot. This all suggests that Greece’s economy is in even worse shape than it may appear.
Greek Prime Minister Tsipras ultimately failed to deliver what he promised: no austerity and staying in the monetary union. The acceptance of the creditors’ demands is likely to precipitate a domestic political crisis that will lead to a change in government. A technocratic government, led perhaps the central bank governor, seems to be the most promising possibility, but new elections cannot be ruled out later this year.
At the same time, it appears that Germany overplayed its hand. The willingness to accept a Greek exit is poisonous. It means that EMU is a more rigid form of the older Exchange Rate Mechanism. The bitterness and vindictiveness of the German stance are bound to create lasting scars within Europe. Although it seems obvious that this will prevent greater integration, we are less sanguine. A new bold initiative toward greater integration is possible precisely because of the fissure.
The other main-focus of investors has been the meltdown in Chinese shares and the aggressive policy response. Chinese equities continued the recovery begun in the middle of last week. The Shanghai Composite rose 2.4%, and the Shenzhen Composite rose by a little more than 4%. More companies unfroze trading in their shares, as the situation slowly normalizes.
This is a big week for Chinese economic data. It began with the June trade figures. Exports were up more than expected, and imports were not as poor as forecast. Exports rose 2.8%. The market expected a 1.0% increase after a 2.5% fall in May. Imports fell 6.1%. They had fallen 17.6% in May. The consensus called for a 15.5% decline. The net result was about a $10 bln smaller than expected trade surplus. The $46.5 bln surplus follows a $59.5 bln surplus in May.
Tomorrow is the release of loan data. Seasonal considerations suggest strong lending. On Wednesday, China reports industrial output, retail sales, and fixed investment, but the main-focus will be on Q2 GDP. It expects to dip below 7%.
A third important issue for investors is the Federal Reserve. Yellen spoke before the weekend. In her plain speaking manner, she indicated that the FOMC was still on the path to hike rates once or twice this year. She argued that while Greece and Chinese developments are important to monitor, domestic considerations drive monetary policy. Yellen repeated her suggestion that there might be preliminary signs of emerging wage pressure. These general points will likely be the basis of Yellen’s testimony before Congress this week.
Besides the numerous Greek deadlines that have come and gone in recent weeks, we note the deadline adjustment for an agreement with Iran. There is some speculation that they strike an agreement over the next 48-72 hours. The anticipated Iranian oil that would hit the global market (millions of barrels could be in floating storage) is one of the factors weighing on oil prices. The US rig count increased last week, for only the second time since December. US output remains near record highs, and OPEC appears to have increased its production further above its quota.
Greece Capitulates, Focus Shifts to ECB is republished with permission from Marc to Market