European stocks followed Wall Street and Asian bourses lower on Thursday in a muted response to the US Congress's approval of a long-anticipated tax overhaul in the country. Analysts said the US tax cuts were already baked into stock prices.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index was down 0.3 per cent, with all major European bourses and sectors trading in negative territory.
Spain's IBEX was down 0.3 per cent, in line with Germany's DAX but slightly better than the Paris CAC 40, down 0.4 per cent, as the Spanish government hopes a regional election will strip pro-independence parties of their control of the Catalan parliament.
Henry Croft of Accendo Markets described “a widely touted buy the rumour, sell the fact event” and investors are now focused on whether the tax reform will boost equities in 2018. Others believe investors will need time to crunch the data and figure out which companies will benefit the most.
“As people sharpen their pencils and figure out which companies will benefit (from the tax bill), and companies start talking about that themselves, I think we'll see larger moves in share prices,” said John Carey, portfolio manager at Amundi Pioneer Asset Management in Boston.
Nokia posted the best performance of the STOXX 600, rising 3.2 percent after announcing a patent agreement with China's Huawei.
Britain's Balfour Beatty was second with a 2.4 per cent rise after it said on Thursday it had agreed to sell a 12.5 per cent stake in M25 motorway operator Connect Plus for 103 million pounds ($137.6 million), helping push up 2017 profit and generating funds to pay down debt. Scandal-hit Steinhoff posted the worst fall, down 12.6 per cent and hitting a low 0.26 euro.