By 0810 GMT, the FTSE Euro-first 300 was up 0.2 percent at 1,053.92 points, after a drop of 2.6 percent the previous session - its biggest daily fall in nearly four months. "We are seeing this as a natural consolidation and a small profit taking. We think there is so much at stake, so eventually the (Greek) deal will go through, but we expect volatility for the next couple of days," Peter Garnry, equity strategist at Saxo Bank, said. "Fundamentally we still think that equities are one of the cheaper asset classes, compared to bonds, and we still think the economy will continue to expand in the US". Copyright Reuters, 2012