Few
signs of market panic as Greece nears default
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[June 30, 2015] By
Lionel Laurent
LONDON (Reuters) - Eurozone stocks,
low-rated bonds and the euro weakened on Tuesday as Greece looked set to
default on a repayment due to the International Monetary Fund and to
plunge deeper into financial crisis.
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There was little evidence of panic, however, with investors pointing
to Europe's improved ability to fight financial contagion since the
height of the euro debt crisis in 2011.
The breakdown of talks between Athens and international creditors
over the weekend has led to a shuttering of banks and capital
controls in Greece and market jitters worldwide, with a referendum
due on Sunday which EU partners say will be a choice of whether to
stay in the euro.
Despite a sense of heading into uncharted territory as the risk of a
Greek exit from the euro zone rise, the sell-off was more muted than
on Monday as investors pointed to possible intervention from the
European Central Bank to fight prolonged financial turmoil as well
as hopes that a deal might be found.
And while Greek ripples were also a drag on investor sentiment in
Asia, Chinese stocks broke a punishing three-day losing streak as
regulators and the government stepped up efforts to prevent the past
few weeks' plunge from inflicting further damage on an already
slowing economy.
Blue-chip euro-zone equities <.STOXX50E> fell 1 percent, marking a
10-percent correction from 2015 highs hit in April, but they are
still up about 10 percent since the start of 2015. Italian, Spanish
and Portuguese sovereign bond yields rose and the euro fell as hedge
funds stepped up sales.
"Even after these market swings, a Greek exit is still not fully
discounted as a positive outcome is still possible," BNP Paribas
Investment Partners said in a note to clients.
"With a majority of Greeks in favour of staying in the eurozone,
there is a decent probability of a referendum outcome in favour of
the creditors' proposals. But until the results are known, we are
likely to see continued market volatility."
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The MSCI All-Country World equity index was flat. MSCI's broadest
index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 1.1 percent but
remained near a five-month low hit on Monday. Japan's stock index
rose 0.6 percent while Korea gained 0.7 percent.
In commodities, oil futures hovered below three-week lows and gold
failed to garner strong safe-haven bids, even with ongoing Greek
uncertainty. London nickel slid 8 percent to six-year lows and
Shanghai nickel also tumbled after the Shanghai exchange broadened
delivery options.
A risk gauge, the CBOE Volatility index, spiked overnight to its
highest levels since February.
"There is still too much uncertainty in the markets and investors
would be watching developments in Greece and China very carefully
before jumping in," said Karine Hirn, Hong Kong-based partner of
Swedish group East Capital, a $3.5 billion fund management firm.
(Reporting by Lionel Laurent; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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