European shares struggle for direction as crisis in Ukraine deepens
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[March 25, 2022] By
Susan Mathew
(Reuters) - European shares were flat on
Friday and were set to end the week lower, as the escalating
Russia-Ukraine conflict kept investors cautious heading into the
weekend.
Declines in financial and energy stocks countered gains in technology
<.SX8P> and defensive sectors, leaving the pan-European STOXX 600 index
0.05% lower, in what could be its third straight session in the red.
After two weeks of gains, the STOXX 600 was set close about 0.4% lower
this week, as lofty energy prices from sanctions on Russia fanned
inflation fears and stoked worries about slowing economic growth.
"We saw quite a significant rally in stocks in the middle of the
Ukrainian war. What we're seeing now really is that the market is losing
a little bit of that confidence again," said Elwin de Groot, senior
market economist at Rabobank.
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German business morale deteriorated in March due to worsening supply
chain issues resulting from high petrol prices as well as driver
shortages, but the country is not facing a recession in the first
quarter due to the Ukraine war, the Ifo institute said on Friday.
London's energy heavy FTSE 100 underperformed, down 0.3%, as a slide in
crude prices weighed on oil and gas shares, which have been very
well-bid since the war. [O/R] [.L]
The West imposed more sanctions on Russia on Thursday, and Washington
was planning a response in the event that Moscow uses nuclear weapons as
it struggles to fight Ukraine's defences with the war entering a second
month.
The day's moves tipped the STOXX 600 into the red for March, in what
could be its third straight month in negative territory.
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The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock
exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, March 24, 2022. REUTERS/Staff
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"Equities are seen as a relatively good hedge in case of inflation, but the type
of inflation that we're currently seeing is a supply shock, which is unlike the
demand destruction caused by COVID-19," said de Groot.
"In a broad sense, you can question whether companies can sail through this
without any damage."
Chipmakers gained, with Infineon and STMicroelectronics up 2.9% and 1.9%,
respectively.
Moody's said on Thursday it does not foresee additional disruptions in
semiconductor manufacturing due to Ukraine producing less neon gas.
Telecom Italia, which is reported to be receiving a bid for some assets from
private equity firm CVC amid a takeover bid from KKR, rose 2.7%
Generali jumped 1%, lifted by a new plan for the insurer that targets higher
growth.
(Reporting by Susan Mathew in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and Maju
Samuel)
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