Europe shares rise, euro falls briefly as sources say
Merkel to give up as party chief
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[October 29, 2018]
By Helen Reid
LONDON (Reuters) - European shares climbed
and U.S. stock futures erased losses on Monday thanks to encouraging
earnings reports, while the euro fell briefly after sources said German
Chancellor Angela Merkel would not seek re-election as head of her CDU
party.
Her decision, which followed bruising losses for her Christian Democrats
in a regional election in Hesse, heralded the eventual end of an era in
which she has dominated European politics.
Senior party sources said Merkel wants to serve her full term as
chancellor until 2021, comment which eased investors' nerves and
subsequently drove the euro back into positive territory.
Europe's autos sector <.SXAP> surged 4.7 percent, set for its strongest
day since August 2015, after a report that China was considering halving
the tax on car purchases in an attempt to boost demand for autos which
has been hurt by a trade war and slowing economic growth.
Germany's DAX <.GDAXI> jumped 2.1 percent by 1128 GMT, boosted by BMW,
Daimler and Volkswagen, while the leading index of euro zone stocks
<.STOXX50E> rose 1.5 percent.
Italy's FTSE MIB <.FTMIB> led the market with a 2.8 percent gain after
Italian bond yields fell sharply to a one-week low following Standard &
Poor's decision to leave Italy's sovereign rating unchanged, prompting
relief there was no ratings downgrade.
This also pushed Italian bank stocks <.FTIT8300> up 4.5 percent, set for
their strongest day since Sept. 10.
Strong gains across Europe helped boost U.S. stock futures back into the
positive, with the Nasdaq futures <NQc1> up 1.4 percent, S&P 500 futures
<ESc1> up 1.1 percent and Dow Jones futures <1YMc1> up 0.7 percent.
The MSCI world equity index <.MIWD00000PUS>, tracking shares in 47
countries, extended early gains to rise 0.4 percent. The index is down
9.3 percent so far this month and has shed $6.7 trillion in market
capitalization since its January peak.
Despite gains on Monday, investors remained wary of betting on a
turnaround in risk. "The only way I can summarize the core sentiment
among the European investors I met is something like 'pretty grim',"
wrote Erik Nielsen, group chief economist at UniCredit, in a note to
clients.
Overnight Asian stock trading was dampened by China’s blue-chip index
which tumbled more than 3.3 percent.
Chinese data underscored worries of a cooling economy as profit growth
at its industrial firms slowed for the fifth consecutive month in
September due to ebbing sales of raw materials and manufactured goods.
Global financial markets have been hit by a range of negative factors
from an intensifying China-U.S. trade conflict to tensions in Europe
over Italy's budget and tightening monetary policy.
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Visitors look at a stock quotation board at Tokyo Stock Exchange in
Tokyo Japan, October 11, 2018. REUTERS/Issei Kato
Many indices are already in official correction territory amid heightened
worries over corporate earnings and global growth.
"With the volatility of the last week or so, today’s stronger open to markets
should not be seen as a sea change but more a pause for breath," said Edward
Park, investment director at Brooks Macdonald.
Analysts have been downgrading their estimates for European earnings at the
fastest pace since February 2016, and weak results from internet giants Amazon
and Alphabet hurt U.S. stocks at the end of last week.
MSCI Europe earnings revisions: https://tmsnrt.rs/2CMGWjW
BOLSONARO WIN BOOSTS EMERGING STOCKS
Emerging markets stocks <.MSCIEF> climbed 0.4 percent in their first rise in
five sessions after far-right candidate Jair Bolsonaro won the runoff in
Brazil's presidential election.
Brazil-exposed stocks in Europe climbed as investors cheered the win.
Blackrock's Latin American Investment Trust <BRLA.L> London-listed shares gained
8.4 percent while a Germany-listed iShares MSCI Brazil ETF <MBRABRL.DE> climbed
5.8 percent.
"Our initial assessment for the Bolsonaro administration is that it will have a
pro-business stance, focused on enhancing the country's competitiveness," said
UBS analysts.
Foreign exchange markets were relatively subdued with the dollar index holding
flat.
The euro <EUR=> recovered after its fall on the Merkel news, and was last up 0.1
percent at $1.1407. Sterling <GBP=> held flat and near a two-month trough of
$1.2775 before Britain’s annual budget due later on Monday.
Finance minister Philip Hammond is likely to urge his divided Conservative Party
to get behind the government’s push for a Brexit deal, or put at risk a
long-awaited easing of austerity.
In commodities, oil prices dipped as investors priced in growing worries about
Chinese growth. U.S. crude <CLc1> pared early losses to fall 28 cents to $67.30
per barrel and Brent crude <LCOc1> slid 29 cents to $77.33.
(Reporting by Helen Reid; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky and David Stamp)
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