IG Market Analyst Chris Beauchamp says uncertainty is negatively affecting the Greek stock market.

SHOWS: LONDON, ENGLAND, UK (JANUARY 29, 2015) (REUTERS - ACCESS ALL)

1. SLATE, READING (English): 'THE GREEK STOCK MARKET HAS BEEN IN A PRETTY BAD WAY OVER THE PAST FEW DAYS - WHY ARE INVESTORS SO ALARMED?'

2. IG, MARKET ANALYST, CHRIS BEAUCHAMP, SAYING:

'It is the classic uncertainty play here, we have a Greek government that is committed to a showdown of one form or another with its euro zone creditors and its counterparts in the rest of the currency union and I think investors have deserted Greece as a result especially the banking sector really. People alarmed that we could be seeing an unraveling of a deal that has kept Greece in the euro zone with all the worries that that implies about whether it leaves the actual union itself, whether it takes a further turn for the worse and I think given the opportunity they would rather find much safer places for their money in other parts of Europe which is actually I think the outlook for Europe as a whole is set to outperform. So Greece is certainly not the place you want to be when the government is deciding to take on its euro zone partners.'

3. SLATE, READING (English): 'GERMANY IS SAYING GREECE MUST NOT BURDEN THE REST OF EUROPE WITH INTERNAL POLITICS - DO YOU THINK THAT'S MORE OF A WARNING AGAINST SPREADING THEIR MESSAGE TO OTHER EURO ZONES COUNTRIES?'

4. IG, MARKET ANALYST, CHRIS BEAUCHAMP, SAYING:

'I think that very much so, you have a German government that is concerned that what they see in Greece could begin to spread across the rest of the euro and especially to Spain in particular where Podemos is gaining in strength in a way that people had not expected only a few months ago really. Germany has enough on its hands now with Greece and the politics there and it doesn't want to have to keep dispatching emergency missions to other parts of the euro zone to keep them on track as well. Ideally Germany would like to seal off Greece and treat it as an isolated case. And I think people thought that was a possibility but now Syriza's victory and the size of the victory has really given hope to left wing parties, anti-establishment parties across the continent. That is going to make life very very difficult for Germany in the coming months.'

5. SLATE, READING (English): 'ARE MARKETS PRICING IN MORE SANCTIONS, OR JUST MORE TALK FROM THE EU, OVER UKRAINE?'

6. IG, MARKET ANALYST, CHRIS BEAUCHAMP, SAYING:

'It is a trend that I think has been underway for a while now, people will have seen the crisis unfolding over the past year or more and will have begun thinking well what happens if this gets worse, if the sanctions escalate. And Carlsberg is just the latest version of that, you will have more and more companies deciding that Russia is not the place to be at the moment whether from a political or indeed a commercial perspective. They will look for other areas to try and fund operations and especially if you are sort of oil companies or other ones predicated on consumer spending. If you are seeing that picking up in other parts of the globe then you move your operations. You adjust your plans to reflect changing realities and the drop in consumer spending in Russia, the drop in consumer spending in Russia, the drop in economic performance in Russia means that we will see further companies exiting, chiefly of course for political reasons.'