Miners drive strong European share gains as Euro zone GDP rises

Rajalakshmi S Updated - January 09, 2018 at 06:44 PM.

european

Miners and oil stocks helped Europe's major share index make robust gains on Wednesday as higher metals prices lent a hand and improved euro zone GDP figures underpinned investor optimism over the region's equities.

The pan-European STOXX 600 rose 0.7 per cent, its third day of gains after a sharp sell-off last week. Euro zone stocks and blue chips jumped 0.8 per cent.

Basic resource stocks were the top boost, jumping 1.8 per cent after London zinc hit a decade high, lifted by Chinese construction spending.

Anglo American, Rio Tinto, Glencore and BHP Billiton all rose 2.2 to 2.3 per cent, cementing strong benchmark gains. Oil stocks also jumped as crude prices edged up.

Euro zone GDP expanded by 0.6 per cent quarter-on-quarter, and the annual growth figure was upgraded to 2.2 per cent from the 2.1 per cent earlier estimated.

Economic growth

Stronger economic growth is part of the reason global active funds remain overwhelmingly positive on European equities, the biggest consensus overweight position according to Barclays analysis of investor flows.

“The market mindset is that Europe is recovering from a very deep, very long recession that hit at its financial core,” said Christopher Peel, chief investment officer at Tavistock Wealth.

“The banking system is finally starting to show signs of having worked through the legacy of 2008-2009,” he added.

Earnings drove some strong moves, while M&A speculation again boosted Fiat Chrysler and Exor, the investment fund which owns the carmaker.

Fiat and Exor jumped 4.2 and 2.6 per cent, extending gains from Monday when a media report said a Chinese company may be interested in the carmaker.

Airlines Lufthansa and Easyjet lifted 1.4 to 2.5 per cent, continuing Tuesday's strong rally as they emerged as likely buyers of Air Berlin's assets when the German airline filed for insolvency.

Swedish healthcare firm Elekta gained 2 per cent after JP Morgan upgraded it to 'overweight'.

“We believe the potential of [radiation therapy] Unity has not been fully captured by the market; this is reflected in the c. 13 percent short interest in the stock,” JP Morgan analysts said.

“Consensus momentum could swing in the next six to 12 months,” they added.

Meanwhile second-quarter profit disappointment weighed on Swedish food retailer ICA , down 5 per cent.

British builder Balfour Beatty jumped 5.8 per cent, leading construction stocks higher, after first-half profits were boosted by a rebound in construction in Britain. Car insurer Admiral dropped 8.4 per cent after its profits rose just 1 per cent in the first half.

Second-quarter results season was drawing to a close, with earnings expected to grow 15 per cent from the second quarter last year, or 12.8 per cent excluding the energy sector, Thomson Reuters data showed.

“Earnings and earnings expectations are rising as you're getting a global recovery,” said Tavistock's Peel.

Published on August 16, 2017 09:44