Gordon Stein, CFO of CleanTech Lithium, explains why CTL acquired the 23 Laguna Verde licenses. Watch the video here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

LIVE MARKETS-Dear Santa please be kind...

Tue, 10th Dec 2019 12:25

* European shares lower on trade caution

* DAX hits lowest in over 5 weeks, off lows on strong ZEW

* Ted Baker down as much as 35% after outlook cut

* Eyes on Deutsche Bank strategy update, shares turn lower

* Asia shares fall slightly as trade deadline looms
Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters
stocks reporters and anchored today by Danilo Masoni. Reach him on Messenger to share your
thoughts on market moves: danilo.masoni.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net

DEAR SANTA PLEASE BE KIND... (1223 GMT)

... and fulfil these two wishes for investors, so that they could have a happy and high
holiday season.

1. A happy pill to get over the 3-1/2 year long Brexit hangover

2. A painless vaccine shot to protect U.S.-China trade

"I'm so thankful that the Brexit tedium is near its end, now if we can only put the US-China
trade monotony in the rear-view mirror so we can all enjoy a high holiday season," says Stephen
Innes, chief Asia market strategist at AxiTrader.

But volatility is sitting quietly ahead of this eventful week. The calmness does make some
investors nervous.

"Volatility in the markets is low, with investors keeping their powder dry ahead of several
risk events such as central bank meetings in the US and Europe, UK elections and the next tariff
deadline on the 15th," Carlo Alberto De Casa, chief analyst at ActivTrades, says.

Checkout UK's performance in USD terms, it is FLAT!

(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)

*****

AN UNCONTROVERSIAL TRILLION-DOLLAR-PLUS NATIONALISATION? (1128 GMT)

Labour's push to bring nationalisations back into mainstream politics ahead of UK Dec. 12
elections has triggered its fair share of controversies.

In particular, Jeremy Corbyn's surprise plan to take BT's network Openreach into public
ownership to provide free broadband for all, went far beyond the rail, utilities and mail
nationalisations expected by investors.

Among the worries triggered by this electoral promise was obviously its price tag: Labour
said it would cost about 20 billion pounds but the chief executive of BT priced the cost for
taxpayers as much as 100 billion pounds.

If that kind of money gets you worried, then how would a trillion dollar feel? Or two? Or
ten?

Yes, the world's biggest nationalisation (it's a bit of a stretch calling it that) ever is
arguably taking place in the United States and isn't spooking investors.

"Under current projections, the Fed is expected to have supported the repo market to the
tune of over $11.5 trillion by the end of January", writes Joshua Roberts, Associate Director at
JCRA.

"The price of stability has been the effective nationalisation of a large part of the
market, with risk once more passing from the private sector to the taxpayer", he adds.

One tricky issue of the so-called repo nationalisation, is, like with quantitative easing
and negative rates, implementing a credible exit strategy.

"As with QE, though, this 'market maker of last resort' role may prove to be a double-edged
sword that is difficult to put down", Robert believes.

(Julien Ponthus)

*****

TELECOMS: IT "SUCKS" INDEED (1053 GMT)

At the start of 2018 a trader at a European bank bluntly gave us his view on telecoms,
saying "without M&A, the sector sucks".

Nearly two year later it looks he was right: there's been no meaningful dealmaking in the
sector except for some tower deals and their overall performance remains a rather poor one.

Plagued by the usual problems - competition, sluggish economy and costly network upgrades --
the telecoms index is up a only 1.1% so far this year.

That's a meagre return compared to the +19% made by the STOXX 600 year-to-date.

But how about next year. Will it be any different?

Barclays analysts led by Mathieu Robilliard are downbeat.

"For 2020, we expect trends to be largely similar to 2019... The sector has underperformed
YTD and remains at the low end of its trading range (absolute and relative)," they say.

"With no change in fundamentals expected in 2020 and no structural evolution (consolidation,
regulation), the sector's attractiveness remains very dependent on top-down sentiment (defensive
in case the macro outlook deteriorates)," they add.

(Danilo Masoni)

*****

OPENING SNAPSHOT: STOXX DOWN, TED BAKER TANKS, DEUTSCHE BANK UP (0828 GMT)

European shares are off to a waker start today with main benchmark indexes falling between
0.2% and 0.6% and most sectors trading in the red. Caution ahead of this week's big events --
FOMC, ECB, UK vote and Dec. 15 trade deadline -- is tangible.

Among individual stocks, UK small cap Ted Baker has fallen as much as 35% to 16-year
lows after the UK fashion retailer cut its outlook once again, suspended its dividend, and
announced the resignation of its CEO and chairman. The stocks is last down 16%.

Elsewhere eyes are on Deutsche Bank, which is rising more than 1.1% as the
troubled German lender is giving a strategy update for investors.

Still on the STOXX 600, Colruyt is getting a nice boost, up 6.7%, after
well-received H1 results, while Tullow Oil is in rebound mode after taking a 70% hit
yesterday after scrapping its dividend and announcing the exit of its CEO.

Here's your opening snapshopt:

(Danilo Masoni)

******

WHAT WE'RE WATCHING AT THE OPEN (0750 GMT)

European shares are expected to open little changed as markets keep moving sideways ahead of
U.S. and euro zone central bank meetings, the UK election and the tariff deadline this week.
Futures on main euro zone benchmarks were led lower by a 0.2% drop in DAX futures, while FTSE
futures edged up 0.1%.

On the corporate news front, Deutsche Bank shares rose 0.9% in early trade after
the German lender reaffirmed its cost targets and said it would report a CET 1 ratio above 13%
for end 2019.

Still in Germany, shares in Deutsche Boerse were seen falling 1% after the
Sueddeutsche Zeitung reported late on Monday that finance minister has drawn up a draft law that
envisages introducing a financial transaction tax in 10 European Union countries.

Eyes also on French car parts maker Valeo which said it planned to double its free
cash flow generation from 2020 to 2022 to reach between 1.3-1.5 billion euros.

Elsewhere there could be some big moves among small and mid caps.

Ted Baker is seen falling 20-25% after its CEO and chairman stepped down and the
fashion retailer cut its full-year outlook again and suspended its dividend.

Computacenter instead could get a 5-10% lift after the company said trading result
will be ahead of market expectations.

(Danilo Masoni)

*****

MORNING CALL: MIXED (0631 GMT)

European shares are expected to open mixed this morning as investors stay on the sidelines
ahead of the Dec. 15 deadline for new U.S. tariffs on China imports to kick in, with the general
election in the UK on Thursday and central banks meeting also making for the cautious mood.

Spreadbetters at IG expect London's FTSE to open 7 points higher at 7,241, Frankfurt's DAX
to open 12 points lower at 13,094 and Paris' CAC to open 4 points lower at 5,833.

Over in Asia, shares eased slightly, while Wall Street pulled back overnight ahead of the
tariff deadline.

(Danilo Masoni)

*****

(Reporting by Danilo Masoni, Joice Alves, Julien Ponthus and Thyagaraju Adinarayan)

Related Shares

More News
9 Apr 2024 16:14

UK shareholder meetings calendar - next 7 days

26 Mar 2024 09:40

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Dr Martens cut to 'sell'; BofA likes Tullow

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Tuesday morning and Monday:

25 Mar 2024 16:51

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Renewed global tensions put pressure on stocks

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London started the week in bad shape and closed lower on Monday, as investors sat on their hands amid rising global ...

6 Mar 2024 09:53

Tullow Oil profit and revenue down on lower oil prices

(Alliance News) - Tullow Oil PLC on Wednesday said a reduction in oil prices led to a drop in its annual profit and revenue, though it still enjoyed a...

6 Mar 2024 08:13

Tullow cites lower oil prices as FY profits, revenue decline

(Sharecast News) - Oil and gas explorer Tullow Oil reported a drop in full-year profit and revenue on Wednesday, citing lower oil prices.

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.