European shares hit a seven-year high on Monday, lifted by growing expectations that the European Central Bank is about to embark on a bond-buying programme to support the euro zone economy.
Shares in Swiss blue-chips paced the gains, with Swiss benchmark index SMI up 3.2 per cent, bouncing back from last week’s sharp correction after the central bank’s shock decision to scrap its cap on the Swiss franc, a move that sent the currency soaring and will hurt the country’s exporters.
Shares in a number of Italian banks surged, lifted by press reports about a planned government reform that could abolish a rule granting one vote to each shareholder regardless of the size of their stake.
Banca Popolare dell'Emilia Romagna was up 8.3 per cent, Banco Popolare up 8.9 per cent and UBI u p 6.2 per cent.
At 0845 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares was up 0.4 per cent at 1,413.07 points, a level not seen since early 2008.
Germany’s DAX index was up 0.7 per cent, trading at a record high. The German bourse is often seen as one of the safest in Europe and tends to benefit the most at first from investment inflows.
Expectations the ECB will start printing money to buy government bonds in a quantitative easing policy aimed at reviving inflation have fuelled a stock rally, helping European stock indexes outperform Wall Street this month.
The ECB bank is set to meet on Thursday.
“Quantitative easing is in the pipeline,’’ said Jean-Louis Cussac, head of the Paris-based Perceval Finance.
“There’s a positive bias on the market overall ahead of the ECB meeting, but the market is very volatile and there are big question marks on the upside potential going forward.’’
Greek shares bucked the trend, with Athens’s ATG index down 0.2 per cent on concerns over the country’s political situation. A survey showed on Saturday that Greece’s anti-bailout Syriza party is solidifying its opinion poll lead over the ruling conservatives eight days before an election.