Economic news

Europe Shares Rise on Powell's Dovish Comments; Focus on Elections

  • STOXX up 0.6%
  • Bpost falls to record low on lower-than-expected guidance
  • UK's JD Sports top loser on FTSE 100 on Barclays downgrade

July 3 (Reuters) - European shares rose on Wednesday as investors welcomed dovish comments from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and looked ahead to the second round of the French vote and national elections in the UK.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index was up 0.6% as of 0845 GMT, rising for a second session out of the last seven.

Wall Street's benchmark S&P 500 closed above the 5,500 mark on Tuesday after Powell told a panel that recent data represented "significant progress" on inflation, while adding that the Fed needed to see more data before changing policy.

Technology stocks added 1.6%, underpinned by Dutch semiconductor equipment makers ASMI and BE Semiconductor Industries, jumping 2.7% and 6.3%, respectively.

"At some point, there will be some correction (in the markets) to the downside. When this starts for semiconductors, other sectors should be there to give support and limit the S&P 500's losses," said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, market analyst at Swissquote.

Miners were the top sectoral gainers, rising 1.7%, after copper prices climbed on a softer dollar amid renewed hopes of U.S. rate cuts and as supply jitters offset a dismal outlook for physical demand from top consumer China.

French stocks climbed 1% as opponents of France's National Rally (RN) stepped up their bid to block the far-right party from power, with more candidates agreeing to pull out of this weekend's run-off election to avoid splitting the anti-RN vote.

"Investors in France are panicking over the possibility of seeing an outright majority of the far-right National Rally. This stress is expected to result in voting to block such a majority, which would be a positive for the markets," Ozkardeskaya said.

Eurofins shares rose 3.1% after the French lab testing firm provided a detailed response to short seller Muddy Waters' allegations.

The UK's FTSE 100 also added 0.5% ahead of the July 4 vote, which could see a possible end to 14 years of Conservative government.

Among stocks, JD Sports dropped 3% to the bottom of the London's blue chip index after Barclays cut the sports fashion retailer to "underweight" from "equal-weight", citing concerns about the company's heavy reliance on Nike.

Volkswagen edged up 1% after U.S. electric vehicle maker Rivian denied a media report about its extended partnership with the German automaker.

Danish shipping giant Maersk rose 3.5% after it agreed to sell its offshore marine service provider Maersk Supply Service to Norway's DOF Group for $1.11 billion.

Bpost tumbled 6.7% after the Belgian postal operator issued a downbeat full-year earnings forecast, citing unfavourable market conditions in North America.

Reporting by Sruthi Shankar in Bengaluru and Jesus Calero in Gdansk; Editing by Sohini Goswami and Sonia Cheema

Source: Reuters


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