Cape Times

European shares react cautiously to Merkel’s win

- Julien Ponthus

EUROPEAN shares edged higher in cautious trade yesterday after German Chancellor Angela Merkel secured a fourth term, but saw her party weakened by a surge in support for the far-right.

At 10.27am both the pan-European Stoxx 600 and euro zone blue chips were 0.1 percent higher – a more moderate reaction than the currency market where the euro took a hit.

European bourses were mixed, with France’s CAC 40 down 0.1 percent, Germany’s DAX up 0.3 percent and Milan flat.

Financials were the biggest drag on European stocks while healthcare, energy and industrial­s helped offset those losses.

Negative surprise “We had a small negative surprise”, Lionel Melin, a senior cross asset strategist for Lyxor, said.

Some traders said they were worried that the vote might lead to a new coalition government less keen on pushing euro zone integratio­n.

French train maker Alstom rose 1.5 percent to its highest level since March 2013 after confirming on Friday that it was in talks with German engineerin­g group Siemens on a possible tie-up.

Switzerlan­d’s ABB rose 0.6 percent on its announceme­nt that it was buying General Electric’s Industrial solutions unit in a deal worth $2.6 billion (R34.35bn).

Shares in ABB have risen around 12 percent so far this year, in line with the broader European industrial­s index.

Unilever, which announced that it would buy cosmetics firm Carver Korea for €2.27bn (R35.73bn), added 0.7 percent.

Unicredit slipped 0.1 percent after its deputy chairperso­n said on Friday that the speculatio­n about his bank wanting to take over Commerzban­k was nonsense. The German bank lost 1.2 percent.

Worst performer Swedish constructi­on firm NCC was the worst performer on the Stoxx, falling 7.2 percent, after it said it expected third-quarter operating earnings to come in far below market forecasts.

Politics continued to play spoilsport in Spain where Madrid’s IBEX lagged its peers, off 0.7 percent.

The mounting political crisis over Catalonia’s campaign for independen­ce, which dragged stocks sharply lower last week, intensifie­d over the weekend. Caixabank took the most points off the index, retreating 2.3 percent. – Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa