European shares fell on Thursday after data pointed to a mixed picture for the euro zone’s economic recovery, with German private sector growth slowing again in May even as France extended its timid recovery.
The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index was down 0.4 per cent at 0751 GMT, with blue-chip German stocks underperforming the region after Markit’s flash composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for Europe’s largest economy showed a drop in May, though it rose in France.
Signs that the positive effects of the European Central Bank’s bond-buying programme, such as a weakening of the euro, may have started to peter out in the second quarter have pushed some investors to trim their exposure to European stocks, though they still remain near multi-year peaks.
“Some of the tailwinds supporting the recovery have become a bit less powerful in recent months,’’ ING strategists wrote in a note to clients.
European shares broadly tracked US and Asian markets, after minutes from last month’s Federal Reserve meeting offered little to alter market expectations of the timing of an interest-rate hike. Economic data out of Asia also pointed to an economy stuck in low gear.
Mining stocks such as Fresnillo, BHP Billiton and Anglo American rose between 1.6 and 2.3 per cent, as hopes of more monetary stimulus from China boosted metal prices.
UK retailer Tesco also rose after traders cited a media report saying the company would start the sales process for its South Korea unit in July. Tesco declined to comment.
Shares of Deutsche Bank, which faces a potentially stormy shareholder meeting later on Thursday, were little changed. The bank reshuffled its management board late on Wednesday, consolidating restructuring authority under co-Chief Executive Anshu Jain, while bidding farewell to its retail banking head Rainer Neske.
Austria’s Raiffeisen Bank fell 2 per cent after the bank’s first-quarter profit fell by nearly half.
Zurich Insurance shares , meanwhile, outperformed after the insurer raised the prospect of returning more cash to shareholders.
The market’s most eye-popping slump came with German-listed Joyou, which sells bathroom wares such as toilets and faucets. The stock slumped 86 per cent after the company said it was mulling whether to file for insolvency after an extraordinary write-down.
Nomura strategists recommended a reshuffle of European equity portfolios, downgrading industrial stocks to “Neutral’’ and recommending banking stocks. “We remain positive on European equities, with the view that earnings growth will be sufficient to drive the market higher,’’ they wrote in a note.