European shares end lower, still post best week in five months
European shares fell yesterday as some downbeat corporate results and disappointing US economic data cast a shadow, though a regional benchmark index posted its best weekly gain in five months. The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index closed 0.4 per...
European shares fell yesterday as some downbeat corporate results and disappointing US economic data cast a shadow, though a regional benchmark index posted its best weekly gain in five months.
The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index closed 0.4 per cent lower on the day at 1,196.41 points but was still up 3.8 per cent for the week, its best performance in five months, on mounting expectations that the European Central Bank will cut interest rates next Thursday.
French fashion firm and luxury goods group PPR was among the top losers – dropping 6.8 per cent in volume three times the average for the past 90 days, after its first-quarter sales missed forecasts.
Bucking the trend was German chemical group BASF, up 3.8 per cent in three times its volume average after saying it expects sales and operating profit growth in all business divisions this year.
Thomson Reuters StarMine data showed 51 per cent of the STOXX Europe 600 companies that have announced results so far have missed analysts’ forecasts.
The FTSEurofirst 300 index extended losses in the afternoon as data showed US economic growth was lower than expected in the first quarter, striking a cautious note ahead of the non-farm payrolls report next Friday.
“Next week is probably when I’ll make up my mind,” said Manish Singh, director and head of invest-ment services at Crossbridge Capital, who has positions in European financial and pharmaceutical stocks.
“If we get a bad set of data then you have to cut your positions because it could play into the crowd thinking of ‘sell in May and go away’.”
The STOXX Europe 600 index fell by an average 0.80 per cent in May over the past 10 years, data from brokerage BTIG showed.
The index is up 0.6 per cent so far this month and a positive close would mark its ninth consecutive monthly gain, the longest winning streak since 1996-97, strengthening the call for a May correction according to traders.
Daily technical charts on the Euro STOXX 50, down 0.8 per cent at 2,683.43 points, showed the index was poised for a strong end to the second quarter but the picture further out was duller.
Philippe Delabarre, a technical analyst at Paris-based Trading Central, said the Euro STOXX 50 was in a bullish pattern, known as a descending broadening wedge, which tends to be followed by a breakout to the upside.
He sees technical resistance at the index’s March top at 2,740 points, which also corresponds to the upper limit of a recent range and so could trap the index in the longer run.
“From a mid-term perspective, a consolidation channel is taking shape,” Delabarre said.
An interest rate cut by the ECB on Thursday, however, could give new impetus to the rally by helping stimulate the struggling eurozone economy and possibly ushering in a gradual softening of Germany’s stance towards southern European countries.