The Jerusalem Post

European stocks drop, weak US financial data

- • By ANKIKA BISWAS and JOHANN M CHERIAN

European stocks dropped on Thursday, hit by bleak earnings from consumer giant Nestle and Dutch digital payments firm Adyen, while sentiment also took a hit following weak economic growth data from the world’s largest economy the United States.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index closed 0.7% lower, after shedding as much as 1.3% intraday, in line with a global stocks rout.

Industrial goods lost 1.8%, leading sectoral declines, as Adyen slumped 18.4% after lower-than-expected first-quarter sales and analysts’ concerns around collected fees being at an alltime low.

Nestle dropped 2% after the world’s biggest packaged food company missed first-quarter organic sales growth estimates, dragging the food and beverages sector down 1.1%.

After signs of recovery earlier this week, the STOXX 600 index hit a volatile patch as investors assessed the impact of record-high interest rates on corporate performanc­e, while staying confident of a European Central Bank rate cut in June.

Technology also shed 1%, tracking sharp declines in US peers after Meta Platforms signaled its costly bet on AI could take years to pay off.

Amplifying the beaten-up sentiment, data showed the US economy grew at its slowest pace in nearly two years, but an accelerati­on in inflation reinforced expectatio­ns that the Federal

Reserve would not cut rates before September.

“This raises fears about stagflatio­n in the US, which no equity investor wants to think about,” said Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactiv­e Brokers.

“If there are problems in the largest economy, it’s going to spill back into other intertwine­d economies... European economies and the US are quite dependent upon each other.”

Meanwhile, ECB’ Isabel Schnabel said the final stage of getting euro-zone inflation back to 2% will be bumpy, with an erosion in productivi­ty, along with high services costs, posing some of the biggest risks.

Among other stocks, Finnish refiner Neste slumped 13% after first-quarter operating profit missed expectatio­ns.

Hermes fell 2.4% as investors booked profits even through the Birkin bag maker reported a 17% surge in first-quarter sales. Peers LVMH and Richemont also lost 2.8% and 1.2%, respective­ly. The broader luxury sector fell 1.7%. French software maker Dassault Systèmes declined 4.2% following first-quarter results.

Spain’s Sabadell jumped 7.6% after forecastin­g lending income would continue growing in 2024, while Deutsche Bank rose 8.2% following a better-than-expected increase in first-quarter profit.

Bucking the broader trend, Britain’s benchmark FTSE 100 touched a record high, led by a 16.1% surge in miner Anglo American on a buyout offer from BHP Group. (Reuters)

 ?? (Toru Hanai/Reuters) ?? THE REFLECTION of a man is seen on an electronic board showing the London FTSE 100 index outside a brokerage in Tokyo.
(Toru Hanai/Reuters) THE REFLECTION of a man is seen on an electronic board showing the London FTSE 100 index outside a brokerage in Tokyo.

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