Cobus Loots, CEO of Pan African Resources, on delivering sector-leading returns for shareholders. Watch the video here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE
Stephen Yiu, FM at WS Blue Whale, discusses Nvidia, Visa/Mastercard, Lam Research & Allied Materials
Stephen Yiu, FM at WS Blue Whale, discusses Nvidia, Visa/Mastercard, Lam Research & Allied MaterialsView Video
Ben Turney, CEO at Kavango Resources, explains the company's progress from exploration to mining
Ben Turney, CEO at Kavango Resources, explains the company's progress from exploration to miningView Video

Latest Share Chat

LIVE MARKETS-Rest of the world: Stay at work!

Thu, 06th Feb 2020 11:08

(Repeats item to fix table)
* European shares climb to new record high
* China to halve tariffs on some U.S. imports
* S&P 500, Nasdaq post record closing highs
* Banks lead gainers on heavy earnings day

Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters
stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan
(thyagaraju.adinarayan@tr.com), Joice Alves (joice.alves@tr.com), Julien Ponthus
(julien.ponthus@tr.com) in London and Danilo Masoni (danilo.masoni@tr.com) in Milan.

REST OF THE WORLD: STAY AT WORK! (1106 GMT)
The last blog post showed European indexes have all beaten or were on the verge of beating
investors' average 2020 targets (November Reuters poll), but it's a different picture when it
comes to rest of the world with many major emerging markets still miles behind:
Index Current level Nov'19 Reuters On target?
poll (2020 est)
S&P 500 3,334.7 3,260 WELL ABOVE


DOW JONES 29,290.9 29,400 JUST SHORT

NIKKEI 23,873.6 25,000 NOPE



CHINA SSE 2,866 3,300 WELL BELOW



RUSSIA 3,115.3 2,785 WELL ABOVE
IMOEX
INDIA NSE 12,138 13,000 NOPE

BRASIL SAP 116,028 130,000 NOPE


(Julien Ponthus)
*****

EUROPE: SELL IN FEBRUARY AND GO AWAY... (1024 GMT)
It's usually in May that the old market saying advises traders and investors to take a break
while stocks are on a high and lock in their profits for the year.
Looking at what expectations were at the end of 2019, it seems that European markets have
already posted much of the performance that was expected of them for 2020 and many indexes are
now cruising in unchartered record high waters.
With uncertainties still running high on the coronavirus, the EU-UK Brexit trade deal, the
U.S. elections and the euro zone economy bottoming out, now might be a good time to take the
rest of the year off?

Index Current level Nov'19 poll On target?
(2020 est)
STOXX 600 425 420 YEP

STOXX 50E 3,797 3,770 YEP
FTSE 100 7495 7,500 VERY, VERY CLOSE
DAX 13,560 13,725 ALMOST THERE

CAC 40 6,024 6,050 VERY CLOSE

FTSE MIB 24,405 23,900 YEP

IBEX 35 9,777 9,500 YEP


Some reading:
POLL-Trade and Brexit deals could push European stocks to record highs
POLL-Not much potential to unleash in London's FTSE

(Julien Ponthus)
*****

OPENING SNAPSHOT: STOXX NOTCHES FRESH RECORD HIGHS (0820 GMT)
It's shaping up as another risk-on day with the pan-European STOXX 600 benchmark
index climbing to a new record high in early deals and cyclical sectors leading a broad-based
rally in another heavy day for earnings updates.
Banks are the biggest gainers and have almost erased all the losses suffered so far
this year, as solid results are helping ease worries over the impact of sub-zero interest rates
in the region. UniCredit is up 5% followed by Nordea Bank and DNB
and Raiffeisen, which are rising around 4%.
ArcelorMittal is stealing the show with a jump of more than 10% after the world's
largest steelmaker forecast increased steel consumption in its core markets and posted a
higher-than-expected annual profit and its lowest ever level of debt.
Royal Mail hit a new lifetime low, falling to the bottom of the STOXX, after
forecasting a challenging year ahead.
Here's your opening snapshot:
(Danilo Masoni)
*****


ON OUR RADAR: EARNINGS, EARNINGS, AND EARNINGS (0753 GMT)
Futures are pointing to a higher open today and it looks like Europe's top benchmark could
break above its previous record high. No coronavirus surprises, lifetime closes on Wall Street
and China's move to cut tariffs on some U.S. imports are all adding to the upbeat mood, along
with some good-looking earnings updates.
On the corporate news front, it's a heavy day for bank earnings that show how the sector is
coping with negative rates. Numbers from Italy's No.1 bank UniCredit, Nordic leader
Nordea and Austria's Raiffeisen are looking good so far and come as
analysts have started to edge up their forecasts on the sector's profits following nearly two
years of downgrades, although Societe Generale and ING Groep fell short of
analyst expectation. Despite the Q4 miss, some traders see Soc Gen shares rising at the open,
supported by a pledge to boost shareholder returns.
Decent numbers in the energy sector from oil majors. One trader sees shares in Total
up 2% after Q4 net adjusted profit steadied at $3.2 billion, beating expectations,
while Equinor could rise 1% after a smaller-than-expected drop in Q4 core operating
profits.
The trade-sensitive car sector, the worst performer in Europe so far in 2020, could
be underpinned by the China tariff news while Toyota raising its full-year profit
forecast on better-than-expected vehicle sales could also be sector positive, even though
Japan's No. 1 carmaker said he impact of the new coronavirus was difficult to gauge. Meantime,
cost cuts and sales growth helped unlisted Volvo Car post an 18% rise in Q4 operating profit.
In tech, possible read-across from U.S. chip maker Qualcomm which said overnight
coronavirus poses a potential threat to the mobile phone industry, overshadowing results that
otherwise beat expectations. A surprise net profit could push shares in telecom network
equipment maker Nokia up 3-5%.
Other stock movers: ArcelorMittal sees 2020 steel pick-up as debt hits low, Sanofi
eyes more EPS growth this year as it narrows focus; BP eyes sale of Algerian
gas plant after Rosneft talks fail -sources; Royal Mail says outlook "challenging" as
mail recovery lags.
(Danilo Masoni)
*****


EUROPE SET FOR MORE GAINS (0640 GMT)
Record closes on Wall Street and a move by China to halve tariffs on some U.S. imports are
expected to help push European stocks higher today despite the coronavirus threat and as
earnings expectations for Q4 stabilise after a string of downgrades.
On the corporate front, it's a busy earnings day, especially in the banking sector.
France's third-biggest bank Societe Generale boosted its capital after asset
sales; Q4 earnings at Nordic leader Nordea Bank topped expectations; Italy's biggest
bank UniCredit posted a lower-than-expected Q4 net loss; while ING Groep's
Q4 pre-tax profit fell slightly short of expectations.
Elsewhere, Nokia posted a surprise Q4 profit and Equinor's profit beat
expectations.
Financial spreadbetters at IG expect London's FTSE to open 42 points higher at
7,482, Frankfurt's DAXto open 82 points up at 13,478 and Paris' CAC to open 36
points higher at 5,985.
(Danilo Masoni)
*****


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

Related Shares

More News
Today 02:00

British firms expecting hard time in China market, lobby group warns

BEIJING, May 22 (Reuters) - British firms expect doing business in China to become harder over the next five years, a British business lobby group s...

Today 00:01

US Cash Products-Chicago RBOB surges after refinery issues

NEW YORK, May 21 (Reuters) - Cash differentials for RBOB gasoline surged on Tuesday after a refinery that has faced operational issues in recent days ...

16 May 2024 17:53

European shares snap nine-day winning streak as Siemens weighs

Roche gains on obesity drug results from early-stage trial *

16 May 2024 17:33

FTSE 100 ends lower on disappointing corporate updates, BT Group soars

BT Group up after CEO aims for more than double free cash flow *

16 May 2024 16:54

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Europe struggles but record highs in New York

(Alliance News) - Large-cap European equities closed lower on Thursday, underperforming New York counterparts, which continued to push higher followin...

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.