Last week began with crosscurrents that made it hard to predict. See: "Fear and Greed: On Monday, It’s China Versus Greece."
This week is starting with no such ambiguity. The Greeks had their vote and tossed a resounding “NO” at their European creditors. And the markets are not happy:
S&P 500 futures fall hard on Greek vote
U.S. stock futures opened sharply lower Sunday night after the Greek people voted resoundingly to reject proposals from their European creditors. S&P 500 futures fell 1.5 percent in early trading after 6 p.m. ET (2200 GMT).Once the magnitude of the Greek vote became clear, the euro began falling against other major currencies, and European stock futures sank (led by a 4 percent decline for the benchmark German DAX).
Because it’s still early on Monday, a lot of futures markets have yet to open. But when they do, it will be with a bang. So expect, along with plunging European and US stocks, extreme currency swings, lower oil prices and surging equities volatility.
And then comes the real excitement. The Greek vote wasn’t legally binding, but it does free the country’s leaders to toss around some big threats come Monday.
This is a story with legs, of course, but as always, it’s important to understand that Greece isn’t the issue. It is to the global financial system what who takes out the trash is to an unhappily married couple: not the central problem, but a perfectly acceptable excuse for a catastrophic conflict. The real problems are in the quadrillion dollar derivatives market, the debt/GDP trends of five or six major countries, income inequality in the US and elsewhere, and the Chinese shadow banking system. Greece might be where it starts, but those other places are where it will end.