Europe: Shares ease from three-week highs after BOE keeps rates on hold
[LONDON] European shares slipped from a three-week high on Thursday after the Bank of England surprised investors by keeping interest rates on hold.
The pan-European Stoxx Europe 600 and the FTSEurofirst 300 indexes were both up 0.8 and 0.9 per cent respectively at the close, having climbed earlier in the session to their highest since June 23 - the date when Britons voted in a referendum to leave the European Union.
European shares eased after the Bank of England caught investors off guard by keeping rates unchanged, while the UK's FTSE 100 index closed 0.2 per cent lower as a surge in sterling made dollar-earning blue-chips less attractive.
Most economists taking part in a Reuters poll had expected the central bank to halve its Bank Rate to 0.25 per cent in order to cushion the economy from the shock of the Brexit vote.
"Although the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) surprised many by remaining on hold, we still expect an easing of policy in the near future," Bill Street, head of Investments EMEA at State Street Global Advisors, said in a note.
The market has been recovering from a sharp, post-referendum sell-off partly on expectations of further stimulus from central banks; the FTSEurofirst index is down just 1.6 per cent since the vote.
The beaten-down banking sector continued its recent upward journey, with the European sector index rising around 2.5 per cent, helped by a 3.6 per cent rise in shares of Deutsche Bank and a 6.6 per cent rise in UniCredit.
Austrian bank Erste Group Bank was the top gainer on the Stoxx 600 index, rallying 13.6 per cent after it flagged "significantly improved" Q2 results.
However, the banking index is still down around 27 per cent, the worst performing sector this year, on concerns about lenders' underlying health and dwindling margins.
Automobile stocks, particularly sensitive to economic conditions, also made gains, with the sector index rising 2.2 per cent on the back of a 2.4 to 5.4 per cent rise in shares of Rheinmetall, Fiat, Daimler and BMW.
REUTERS
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