European shares hover at 12-month high on Italy relief, trade optimism

04 Jul, 2019

By 0813 GMT, the pan-European STOXX 600 index was flat, while the euro zone's STOXXE edged 0.1pc higher, a day after the bourses hit fresh 2019 peaks on hopes that France's Christine Lagarde will stick to ECB's dovish stance as the bank's next chief.

Milan's FTMIB hit a fresh two-month peak, while its bank index climbed about 3pc after Italy persuaded the European Commission that new measures submitted this week would help bring its growing debt in line with EU fiscal rules.

While Italy has dodged the bullet for now, the ghost of a disciplinary action could be back in the autumn when the 2020 budget will be drafted, said ING senior economist Paolo Pizzoli.

"As things stand, crafting a fiscally sound 2020 budget will prove challenging."

Trading volumes are likely to be thin as US financial markets remained shut for Independence Day. The three main Wall Street indexes clinched fresh record closing highs a day before, as a spate of weak economic data firmed up bets that the US Federal Reserve would cut interest rates to spur growth.

Expectations of lower borrowing costs have helped European equities recover from May's losses and resume their 2019 rally. The STOXX 600 is up more than 16pc this year.

Meanwhile, trade-sensitive autos sector rose 0.5pc on news that top representatives from the United States and China are arranging to resume talks next week.

Also helping the auto stocks were gains in shares of French car parts company Valeo after it won 500 million euros ($564 million) worth of orders for its 'Lidar' car sensor products.

Dealmaking aided the sentiment with Finnish engineering group Metso up more than 3.8pc after the company said it would merge Outotec with its main Minerals unit to create a larger engineering firm serving the minerals, metals and aggregates industries.

In Germany, Osram rose 2.6pc, extending Wednesday's more than 10pc jump after the lighting company confirmed it had received a takeover offer of 3.4 billion euros ($3.84 billion) from Bain and Carlyle.

British Airways-owner IAG and Coca-Cola HBC were the top decliners on the pan-European benchmark index as their shares were trading ex-dividend.

Copyright Reuters, 2019

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