Europe close: Stocks bounce back
Updated : 18:21
European shares extended gains on Wednesday as a softer US jobs market report increased hopes of a cut in US interest rates, while investors also looked ahead to a similar move from the European Central Bank tomorrow.
The pan-European STOXX 600 gained 0.81% to 521.23, while Spain's benchmark IBEX index added 0.59% to 11,353.10, as survey data showed the services sector had produced its steepest rise in activity for a year.
Commenting on the market backdrop, Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Susannah Streeter told clients: "The wheel of speculation over when interest rate cuts will come in the US has stopped in a more positive position, buoying sentiment.
“Weaker JOLTS jobs data [on Tuesday] indicates that the negotiating stance of American employees for higher wages is more fragile, adding to hopes that stubborn price pressures will ease. With interest rate cuts spied again on the horizon, Wall Street ended in more upbeat territory, and more optimism is washing through into trading in Europe.”
That was followed come Wednesday by consultancy ADP's US private sector payrolls report which showed a weaker-than-expected 152.000 jump in May.
In other economic news, growth in the eurozone's private sector was revised slightly lower for May, according to final estimates of the region's composite purchasing managers' index (PMI) by S&P Global and Hamburg Commercial Bank (HCOB).
Nevertheless, the eurozone economy still expanded at its fastest rate in a year as inflation continued to cool.
The final reading of the HCOB eurozone composite PMI was 52.2 for May, down marginally from the preliminary reading of 52.3 but up from 51.7 in April and the highest rate of growth since May 2023.
In equity news, shares in Elekta slumped 18% after the Swedish radiation therapy equipment maker posted bigger-than-expected drop in Q4 profit.
Zara-owner Inditex jumped 4% on better-than-expected current trading numbers in its first-quarter results.
British gas owner Centrica fell despite saying all its business units would hit medium-term earnings targets two years early.
Annual operating profits at B&M European Value Retail came in at the top end of guidance, but shares fell sharply on Wednesday after the discount retailer offered no firm guidance for the current financial year.