Malta Independent

European shares climb on signs of decrease in coronaviru­s cases

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European shares rallied for a second straight day on Tuesday with investors focusing on early signs that the coronaviru­s pandemic may be easing, even as major companies took steps to shore up cash.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index rose 3.1% to its highest level in nearly a month, with Spanish and Italian stock surging 3.4% and 4.5%, respective­ly, on a slowdown in new infections in Italy, Spain and hard-hit parts of the United States.

The benchmark STOXX 600 index has gained more than 22% since hitting an eight-year low in March - technicall­y marking a bull market - but remains 24% below its February record high, when the global spread of the coronaviru­s led to a virtual halt in business activity.

France’s Thales on Tuesday became the latest big company to slash dividend and suspend profit forecasts, but its shares rose 3.8% after it added a new 2 billion euro credit facility to shore up liquidity.

German shares surged 4.5% to their highest since March 11, as data showed industry output in Europe’s manufactur­ing powerhouse rose by a better-thanexpect­ed 0.3% in February, before the pandemic prompted sweeping lockdowns.

However, analysts said output will likely tumble in the next three months with the Ifo institute’s index for production expectatio­ns logging its biggest drop since the survey was first conducted in 1991.

With a slate of companies withdrawin­g their financial forecasts and supply chains far from being revived, economists polled by Reuters said a global recession was under way, although most clung to hopes of a swift rebound.

Cineworld which has lost about three quarters of its value this year, surged 35.8% after saying it was in talks lenders for its liquidity needs as the strict stay-athome orders forced it to shut all its 787 cinemas across 10 countries.

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