EUROPE MARKETS: Banks Pressure Europe Stocks; Investors Eye China, Wall Street
March 05 2019 - 8:45AM
Dow Jones News
By Barbara Kollmeyer, MarketWatch , Emily Horton
Raffeisen Bank, ING, Vodafone under pressure
Europe's markets mostly held around the flat line Tuesday, but
banks were under pressure amid reports on a fresh money laundering
scandal, while investors kept an eye on China's economy and Wall
Street on the heels of a tough session for U.S. equities.
How are markets performing?
The Stoxx Europe 600 slipped 0.2% to 374.44 after finishing
Monday up 0.2%.
The FTSE 100 led the region's top gainers, climbing 0.7% to
7,1892.92, with Italy's FTSE MIB giving up an early lead to slip
0.1% to 20,694.12.
Meanwhile, the German DAX (DAX) eased 0.1% to 11,576.30,
France's CAC 40 eased 0.1% to 5,280.51 and Spain's IBEX 35 fell
0.4% to 9,217.10.
The pound gave up earlier gains, falling 0.6% to $1.3105, while
the euro slipped to $1.1324 from $1.1340 late in New York on Monday
night.
What's driving the markets?
China lowered its growth target to between a range of 6% to 6.5%
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/china-sets-economic-growth-target-vows-foreign-companies-will-get-equal-treatment-2019-03-04)
on Monday, placing it below last year's 6.6% growth target. The
lower bound of the target would mark a three decade low for China's
economic growth, but it would still be among the world's strongest
economies.
Alongside this announcement Premier Li Keqiang said that China
was aim to achieve nearly 2 trillion yuan ($298 billion) of cuts in
taxes and other economic measures.
Meanwhile, in Europe, February's PMI data showed Italy's service
sector unexpectedly returned to growth last month, but a GDP
release confirmed the country went into technical recession at the
end of last year. Both will be in the mix ahead of Thursday's
European Central Bank meeting
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/opinion-ecb-has-a-plan-for-markets-and-is-looking-for-reasons-to-act-2019-03-05).
In the U.K., services PMI came in above forecast, showing a modest
increase in activity.
The British pound fell following reports that the U.K.
government does not expect any breakthrough to be achieved at a
meeting between British Attorney General Geoffrey Fox and European
Union chief negotiator Michel Barnier. A weaker currency can boost
the FTSE 100, as it benefits up exporters who earn revenue in other
currencies.
Elsewhere, the Bank of England said U.K. banks will be able to
borrow in euros from the Bank of England from next week
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/bank-of-england-activates-euro-swap-line-2019-03-05-5485614),
the latest move to support the U.K.'s financial system in the event
of an abrupt and messy break from the European Union.
The bank warned that investors should still prepare for severe
disruption in financial markets if the U.K. tumbles out of the EU
March 29 with no deal.
What stocks are active?
Banks were under heavy pressure, notably Austrian bank
Raiffeisen Bank International AG (RBI.VI), down 15%. Bloomberg
reported
(https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-03-05/dirty-money-scandal-widens-with-reports-on-nordea-and-lithuania)
that Bill Browder's Hermitage Fund said the bank did not heed
warning signals that would have prevented laundering by criminals
in Russia.
Meanwhile, Dutch banks fell on a separate report in magazine De
Groene Amsterdammer
(https://www.euronews.com/2019/03/05/dutch-banks-abn-amro-ing-fall-after-money-laundering-report)
that said billions had been illegally funneled through European
banks, with ABN Amro AG (ABN.AE) off 2% and ING AG (INGA.AE) (ING)
down 2.8%.
Vodafone Group PLC (VOD.LN) added 3% after the group announced
plans to sell $4.5 billion of convertible bonds to help fund its
acquisition of some of Liberty Global PLC's European business. The
telecommunications giant is also considering buybacks to reduce
share dilution.
Elsewhere, French telecoms were under pressure with Altice
Europe NV (ATC.AE) slumping 7% and Iliad SA (ILD.FR) down 2.7%
after Barclays downgraded the sector
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/french-telecoms-fall-after-barclays-downgrade-2019-03-05)
and cut its estimates and target prices over a more cautious
outlook.
Intertek Group PLC (ITRK.LN) lost 3%, with UBS analysts raising
concerns about a slowdown, despite the company reporting a pretax
profit rise of 2.8%.
Meanwhile, Ashtead Group PLC (AHT.LN), which makes 90% of its
profit from its U.S. operation Sunbelt, dropped by nearly 2%
despite well received results.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 05, 2019 09:30 ET (14:30 GMT)
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