EUROPEAN stocks closed at a one-month high on Tuesday, with Germany’s DAX briefly touching the 20,000 mark for the first time, as investors monitored France’s political turmoil with the government on the verge of collapse.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 rose 0.4 per cent to 515.53 points, logging its fourth session of gains. Retailers and defence stocks led sectoral advances with a more than 1.4 per cent rise each.
Germany’s DAX closed up 0.4 per cent, boosted by tech stocks such as SAP, while Italy added 1 per cent and Spain rose 1.1 per cent.
France’s CAC 40 index closed a choppy session up 0.2 per cent, with markets on edge ahead of an all but certain collapse of the country’s three-month old government on either Wednesday or Thursday.
Far-right and left-wing parties submitted no-confidence motions on Monday against Prime Minister Michel Barnier, who is facing strong opposition to his government’s budget. Barnier is expected to address television news programmes around 1900 GMT.
On the day, the risk premium investors demand to hold French debt over German Bunds was close to its highest in more than 12 years.
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The CAC 40 has lagged its regional peers since mid 2024, while its German counterpart has been the best-performing index in Europe even though the country is also preparing for domestic elections while facing a bleak economic picture.
“For now, if we’re expecting the French and German governments to be in difficult situations over the next few months, then surely that puts downside pressure on the ECB to continue cutting rates further and that helps European stocks,” said Daniela Hathorn, senior market analyst at Capital.com.
Other analysts have also cited a weaker euro aiding export-focused companies along with no fresh tariff threats from US president-elect Donald Trump on European exports.
The euro zone GDP, retail sales and PMI data will likely set the market tone through the remainder of the week.
Among top movers, Worldline came at the bottom of the Stoxx index after Bain Capital denied reports that it was in takeover deliberations regarding the payments firm.
ASML rose 2 per cent as the chip equipment maker does not expect new US restrictions on semiconductor exports to China to affect its most recent financial guidance. Exane BNP Paribas also re-initiated the stock’s coverage with an “outperform” rating.
Delivery Hero slid 5.5 per cent after South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol declared martial law in the Asian country. South Korea accounted for 24 per cent of group sales in 2023.
Hugo Boss climbed 6 per cent after UBS upgraded the German fashion house to “buy” from “neutral”, while Hochtief topped the STOXX with a 7.1 per cent rise after a BofA Global Research upgrade.
Mercedes-Benz dropped 2.5 per cent after Barclays cut its rating on the German carmaker’s shares to “underweight” from “equal-weight”. REUTERS
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Publish date : 2024-12-03 14:28:00
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