EUROPE’S main share index notched a record high on Wednesday, as investors cheered robust earnings from the likes of UK’s Experian and Germany’s Commerzbank, while rate-sensitive stocks got a boost after a softer-than-expected US inflation print.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 was up 0.6 per cent, with Germany’s DAX and France’s CAC 40 index also closing at all-time highs.
A Stoxx fear gauge dropped to over a month low of 13.09 points.
Upbeat corporate earnings have offered a fresh boost to European shares, helping them regain lost ground this month and catch up with their US peers.
The Stoxx 600 is up over 9.5 per cent year-to-date, almost in line with an over 10 per cent jump seen in the benchmark US S&P 500 index.
Rate-sensitive real estate and technology stocks jumped 3.6 per cent and 1.1 per cent, respectively, after data showed US consumer prices rose less-than-expected in April, boosting bets the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates two times this year, making room for larger cuts from the European Central Bank.
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“The ECB said they’re not Fed dependent, but they’re certainly Fed conscious and that print gives them marginally more flexibility, especially with the view on the third rate cut towards the end of the year,” said Thomas Gehlen, senior market strategist at SG Kleinwort Hambros.
On the earnings front, Experian jumped 8.1 per cent and was the biggest boost to the main index after the credit data firm posted an upbeat annual organic revenue growth forecast. Poland’s InPost advanced 6.2 per cent following its higher first-quarter core earnings.
Boosting the healthcare index, Merck KGaA rose 4.7 per cent after better-than-expected adjusted earnings.
Commerzbank climbed 5.1 per cent and was among top gainers on Germany’s main index after the lender reported its strongest quarterly profit in a decade, beating expectations.
Further on data, the euro zone economy grew by 0.3 per cent in the first quarter, with Spain outperforming the broader region with 0.7 per cent growth. The country’s main index added 1.1 per cent.
On the other hand, Finland’s Neste slumped 14.8 per cent to the bottom of the Stoxx 600 after the biofuels producer and oil refiner lowered its 2024 margin outlook for renewable products.
Dutch bank ABN Amro shed 6.1 per cent after a weaker first-quarter capital ratio overshadowed a better-than-forecast net profit.
Of the Stoxx 600 companies that have reported first-quarter earnings to date, 60.7 per cent beat estimates, versus the typical quarterly 54 per cent beat rate, LSEG data showed on Tuesday.
Among others, HelloFresh lost 4.6 per cent after JPMorgan downgraded the German meal-kit firm to “neutral” from “overweight”, while Carrefour shed 4 per cent after JPMorgan downgraded the French supermarket to “underweight” from “neutral”. REUTERS