Mon Jul 6,
2015 4:39am EDT Related: GREECE
LONDON | BY NIGEL STEPHENSON
Reuters
Shares fell
in Europe and Asia, the euro stumbled and yields on weaker euro zone economies'
bonds rose after Greece
overwhelmingly voted against conditions for a rescue package, but there was no
rout and contagion was limited.
Investors
sought low-risk assets including Bunds, but the yield premium of Italian
10-year debt over Germany
remained below last Monday's eight-month highs.
The euro
EUR= lost half a percent to $1.1064 and 0.6 percent against the safe-haven
Japanese yen EURJPY=. It fell as low as $1.0967 in Asia before rebounding,
taking some support from the resignation of Greece 's outspoken finance
minister, Yanis Varoufakis.
Some
bankers, including JPMorgan, said the vote made it more likely that Greece would
leave the single currency. Other investors said the European Central Bank's
response would be key to the extent of contagion.
"The
market is, rightly or wrongly, taking a great deal of credence of the fact that
the ECB has many more defence mechanisms in place than it did in 2011-12,"
said Andrew Milligan, head of global strategy at Standard Life Investments.
"Some
of the measures we've seen already could be seen as a subtle signal by the ECB
that it is ready to step up... This point of the ECB being ready to step in is
very important to the market reaction we've seen."
Many
traders and analysts had expected a closer result in Sunday's referendum or
even a 'Yes'. In the event, more than 60 percent of those who voted rejected
the conditions demanded by Greece 's
creditors.
The
pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index .FTEU3 was down 1.2 percent, led lower by
banks. Germany 's DAX .GDAXI
fell 1.24 percent while Italy 's
FTSE MIB index .FTMIB dropped 2.8 percent. Italy ,
along with Spain and Portugal , are seen as the economies most
vulnerable to contagion from Greece .
"Markets
have yet to be convinced in full either that the (Greek) exit door will be open
or that the extent of any contagion from this could be irreparably damaging to
the system," said Neil Williams, chief economist at Hermes Investment
Management.
Yields on
Italian, Spanish and Portuguese government bonds rose between 5 and 8 basis
points. German 10-year yields DE10YT=TWEB fell 5.3 bps to 0.75 percent.
The yield
gap between Italian and German 10-year bonds, at 158 bps, was below last
Monday's eight-month high, which followed the collapse of talks between Greece and euro
zone leaders.
The euro's
move was similar to the action a week ago.
"For
all the worry about Greece
and the future of the euro zone, that is leading people to buy core European
assets as a safe haven and that, ironically you might say, supports the
euro," said Jane Foley, a strategist with Rabobank in London .
The euro's
fall helped push the dollar up 0.1 percent against a basket of currencies .DOXY
RUSH FROM
RISK
In Asia, a
rush from risk took MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
.MIAPJ0000PUS down 2.8 percent in the steepest daily drop in two years.
Chinese
stocks rose, however, in the wake of an unprecedented series of support
measures from Beijing
to halt a slide of around 30 percent since mid-June. The CSI 300 index of the
largest listed companies in Shanghai
and Shenzhen .CSI300 rose 2.9 percent.
Brent crude
oil futures LCOc1 fell 67 cents to $59.66 a barrel. Gold, traditionally seen as
a safe haven, initially rose after the Greek vote, but gains fizzed out due to
the dollar's relative strength. It XAU= traded at $1,165 an ounce.
(Additional
reporting by Wayne Cole in Sydney, Hideyuki Sano in Tokyo
and Patrick Graham, Lionel Laurent and Alistair Smout in London ; editing by John Stonestreet)
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