European markets climb as less hawkish Fed soothes investors

Thu Jul 28 2022
Mark Cooper (3148 articles)
European markets climb as less hawkish Fed soothes investors

The pan-European Stoxx 600 added 0.3% in early trade, with basic resources rising 3.2% to lead gains while telecoms slid 1.4%.

The Fed on Wednesday implemented a widely expected second consecutive 75 basis point interest rate hike, as it seeks to reel in runaway inflation without tipping the slowing economy into recession.

Chairman Jerome Powell maintained a hawkish tone on curtailing inflation in a subsequent news conference, but the central bank dropped guidance on the scale of the next rate hike and acknowledged that “at some point” it will be appropriate to slow the pace of increases.

“While the market rallied Wednesday, we don’t think a sustained improvement in sentiment is likely until the Fed sees enough evidence of ebbing inflation to signal that an end to rate rises is in sight,” said Mark Haefele, chief investment officer at UBS Global Wealth Management.

“While inflation is likely to decline in the coming months, it is likely to remain above central bank targets. Data stretching back to 1975 indicates that value sectors tend to outperform when inflation is above 3%, which we expect to be the case for some time to come. Furthermore, growth stocks are still expensive relative to value stocks.”

Earnings in focus

Earnings continue to drive individual share price movement in Europe, with a slew of major companies reporting before the bell on Thursday. They included Barclays, Shell, EDF, TotalEnergies, Stellantis, Leonardo, Prada, Diageo and BT.

Barclays saw a 48% slump in second-quarter profit after taking a substantial provision relating to a costly trading error in the U.S. The British bank reported a £1.071 billion ($1.30 billion) net profit attributable to shareholders, meeting expectations of £1.085 billion expected by analysts, according to Refinitiv.

Barclays shares slid 0.6% in early trade.

Danish wind turbine manufacturer Vestas climbed more than 11% to lead the Stoxx 600, while German health care company Fresenius fell more than 13% to the bottom of the index after issuing a profit warning.

On the data front, a key euro zone business climate and economic sentiment survey for July is due on Thursday, along with preliminary German inflation figures.

Mark Cooper

Mark Cooper

Mark Cooper is Political / Stock Market Correspondent. He has been covering Global Stock Markets for more than 6 years.