The Business Times

Europe: Autos and banks help shares rebound after sell-off

Published Mon, Oct 29, 2018 · 10:12 PM
Share this article.

[LONDON] A rally in auto and banking stocks helped European shares rise on Monday in a rebound from a sell-off which had depressed them to a level not seen since December 2016.

The Stoxx 600 benchmark index ended 0.9 per cent higher as investors cheered a solid update from bank heavyweight HSBC as well as Standard & Poor's decision to leave Italy's sovereign rating unchanged.

The gains in Europe followed a sluggish performance in Asia, where worries about China's slowing economy weighed, although a mixed start on Wall Street pulled main indexes off their highs.

"European markets enjoyed a stronger start to the week, despite a sell-off in China as investors digested the impact of a trade war with the US on industrial earnings," said Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.

Despite the bounce, the Stoxx 600 remained on track for its worst monthly performance since August 2015.

The banking sector rose 1.9 per cent to a one-week high, with HSBC rising 4.8 per cent after Europe's biggest bank by assets posted a higher-than-expected 28 per cent rise in third-quarter profit.

Italian banks shone after rating agency S&P's kept its credit rating two notches above non-investment grade for Italian sovereign bonds, even though it lowered its outlook to negative, saying that the new government's policy plans were weighing on the country's growth and debt prospects.

Banco BPM shares rose 5 per cent, Ubi Banca 4 per cent and UniCredit 4.3 per cent.

However, Spain's state-controlled Bankia fell 2.9 per cent after posting lower than expected third-quarter results.

Autos were the strongest sectoral performer, up 3 per cent. They rose sharply after a report said that China was considering halving its car purchase tax to 5 per cent to support its struggling auto industry, which has been hit hard by the ongoing Sino-US trade war.

The report lifted shares in carmaker Volkswagen by 4 per cent, and drove tyre maker Continental and chipmaker Infineon, which supplies technology to the automotive industry, to the top of the German DAX index.

Their gains helped offset worries over the political outlook in Germany, Europe's largest economy after German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she would not seek re-election as party chairwoman at a conference in early December and that her current term as chancellor would be her last.

Drugmaker Novartis added 1.7 per cent. The Swiss group and Pfizer are teaming up to develop treatments for a liver disease many drug companies believe will become a hugely lucrative market.

REUTERS

BT is now on Telegram!

For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to  t.me/BizTimes

Capital Markets & Currencies

SUPPORT SOUTH-EAST ASIA'S LEADING FINANCIAL DAILY

Get the latest coverage and full access to all BT premium content.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Browse corporate subscription here