Finance & Stock Market News


European shares fall for 3rd day; focus on US GDP

Fri, 30th Jul 2010 09:57




By Atul Prakash

LONDON, July 30 (Reuters) - European shares slipped for a

third straight session on Friday, with construction shares among

top losers, as concerns over U.S. economic growth and downbeat

comments from a Federal Reserve official hurt market sentiment.

At 0818 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 index of top

European shares was down 0.3 percent at 1,043.81 points after

rising to a high of 1,048.49 earlier in the session. But the

index was on track to record its best monthly gain since March.

Construction and materials shares were the worst hit on

concerns about a slowdown in economic recovery. The sector index fell 1.1 percent, while Ferrovial, Holcim and Saint-Gobain dropped 0.8 to 1.6 percent.

France's Lafarge, the world's largest cement

maker, fell 4 percent as it cut its 2010 outlook estimate for

global cement demand in its markets.

'What I see in this market is a fight between macro-economic

data and better-than-expected company results,' said Koen De

Leus, economist at KBC Securities. 'It appears the U.S. Federal

Reserve is preparing the markets for worst-than-expected data.'

Investors stayed cautious ahead of a government report,

which is expected to show at 1230 GMT that U.S. economic growth

likely slowed in the second quarter.

St. Louis Federal Reserve bank President James Bullard's

comments on Thursday that he is worried about the risks the U.S.

might fall into a Japan-style quagmire of falling prices and

investment also dampened mood.

In Britain, consumer confidence fell for the fifth month in

a row in July to its lowest in almost a year.

'This type of news flow will continue to depress

expectations over the pace of economic recovery,' said Gerard

Lane, analyst at Shore Capital.

'This may translate through to knocking back the recovery of

sterling and in addition adds further support to our thesis of a

poor outlook for the UK consumer.'

Strong company results, however, offered some support to the

market and limited losses. Total rose 1.9 percent as

it said second-quarter underlying net profit jumped 72 percent,

thanks to higher oil prices. The French oil major continued a

trend across the sector by reporting strong production after

years of sluggish growth.

Telecom equipment maker Alcatel-Lucent jumped 6.7

percent after the company said it would reach its annual profit

targets despite an industry-wide chip shortage.

Across Europe, the FTSE 100, Germany's DAX

and France's CAC 40 fell 0.4 to 0.5 percent.



FACES RESISTANCE

Analysts said the market's failure to break key levels could

trigger a technical sell-off in the coming
sessions.

'We are at a point where the technical picture has improved

considerably, but the problem is that the S&P 500 index doesn't

want to break through the 200-day moving average,' De Leus said.

'It's a worrying sign and if it stays like this for too

long, then we can expect to go down again.'

On Thursday, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index dropped

0.4 percent to 1,101.54 points -- slightly below its 200-day

moving average of 1,114.25. The index tried to convincingly

break the average in several sessions this week, but failed.

The Euro STOXX 50, the euro zone's blue chip

index, fell 0.7 percent to 2,734.24 points. This week, the index

faced strong resistance at around 2,806 points -- its 61.8

percent Fibonacci retracement of a fall from an April high to a

low in May. It now hovers around the 50 percent retracement.

Banks also lost ground, with the STOXX Europe 600 banking

index down 0.4 percent. Barclays, BNP Paribas and Royal Bank of Scotland fell 1-1.5 percent.

British Airways still expects to break even in the

full year, despite reporting wider first quarter losses due to

the impact of volcanic ash and strike-related disruption. Its

shares rose 3.1 percent.

(Editing by Mike Nesbit)

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(atul.prakash@reuters.com; +44 20 7542 6189; Reuters Messaging: atul.prakash.reuters.com@reuters.net)

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