European shares rise, HSBC, energy stocks lead
European shares rose in quiet trade yesterday led by HSBC, Europe's biggest bank, on better-than-expected results, and energy stocks on the back of high crude oil prices. HSBC rose 1.9 per cent after reporting a year-on-year rise in quarterly profit as...
European shares rose in quiet trade yesterday led by HSBC, Europe's biggest bank, on better-than-expected results, and energy stocks on the back of high crude oil prices.
HSBC rose 1.9 per cent after reporting a year-on-year rise in quarterly profit as growth in Asia and elsewhere helped counter a $3.2 billion bad-debt charge related to its US consumer finance business. Some analysts had expected a quarterly loss.
"Group profit up on Q1, 2007... is a claim few banks in Europe will be able to make," Collins Stewart said in a note. "HSBC remains a safe haven and core holding for us."
Collins Stewart rates HSBC "buy" with a target price of 999 pence. HSBC shares were the biggest positive weight on the FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares, which rose 0.3 per cent to 1,346.47 points, after posting its first weekly loss in a month last week.
Volumes were thin yesterday due to a partial holiday in many European countries. "Mostly we've been watching Wall Street," one Germany-based trader said.
Energy stocks underpinned the gains, with France's Total up 1.4 per cent and BP 1.1 per cent higher. US June crude oil futures hit a record $126.40 a barrel while Brent remained in sight of Friday's record highs.
"The high oil price is helping the oil sector and the commodity sector is also doing well, but the more the oil price rises, the more it becomes a problem for the overall economy so it's not universally bullish," said Ronan Carr, equity analyst at Morgan Stanley. Overall, Morgan Stanley said investors should be cautious.
"This is strength to sell into. We think we are very early in the downgrade cycle," the US investment bank said in a European equity strategy note.