Most investors are keeping a calm head by keeping Greece's crisis in perspective.
As Greek voters
went to the polls on Sunday, ultimately voting against the latest austerity measures presented by the European Union to help guide Greece out of it financial straits, there doesn't appear to be any happy outcomes for the Mediterranean country.
But even as Sunday's vote was
expected to rattle the global equity markets, some investors are barely taking notice of what happens in a country with an economy about a third the size of New York state.
“We have tried to educate our clients not to overreact to events and use them as opportunities to exploit them for their benefit,” said David Demming, president of Demming Financial Services Corp.
The general calm among his client base was illustrated through a morning email from a client inquiring about using any Greece-related market pullback as an opportunity to convert a traditional IRA to a Roth.
“You like to do things like that when things are depressed, and we like pessimism because it creates opportunities,” Mr. Demming said. “Our clients are not spooked by the short-term events, because they know there's a good possibility that the world will not come to an end.”
MELTDOWN AVOIDED
As the vote tallies started rolling on Sunday, there were warnings about a global market meltdown, but as of midday Monday, the U.S. equity markets saw only a modest pullback. After dropping 166 points off the opening bell, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was off about 48 points, or 0.27%, at 17,682.04. The S&P 500 slipped three points, or 0.15%, to 2,073.57 while the Nasdaq composite was down even less, losing just two points, or 0.03%, to 5,007.47.
It isn't that markets ignored the
significance of what could be the first developed market to default on its debt, but the reality is that Greece is becoming an old story.
“This has been with us since 2010, and we've been explaining the Greece scenario to our clients all along,” said Bryan Beatty, partner at Eagan Berger & Weiner.
“If you're sitting in cash and you've been looking for an opportunity to get in to the markets, there might be a reason to take notice,” he added. “But this is really a political issue and the bigger question is what it means for the rest of the eurozone.”
One potential scenario Mr. Beatty sees is that Greece will somehow navigate its way out from under its debt and ultimately away from the euro, and that could become a blueprint for debt-laden countries such as Portugal, Italy and Spain.
“It's a dangerous scenario for the European Union,” he added. “We're avoiding the entire European southern region.”
Tim Holsworth, president of AHP Financial Services, described Greece as “more of an irritation for the markets, but not a fundamental problem.”
“Even if it creates some volatility,” he added, “we don't trade actively enough to change our long-term portfolios.”
The Monday buying opportunity that didn't initially present itself is still a lingering possibility, according to Nigel Green, founder and chief executive of deVere Group.
“There will be extensive negotiations taking place right now behind the scenes between Athens and its creditors,” he said. “This chaos will mean that investors will be braced for more turbulence and there could be a stock market selloff over the coming days as investors seek perceived safe havens.”