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.
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
"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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