Europe close: Stocks consolidate gains even as single currency jumps
European stocks made slight gains as markets consolidated the previous session's sharp rise on the heel of the results of the French presidential election, with the euro continuing to advance of the European Central Bank's next policy meeting.
The benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 index tacked on 0.21% to 386.91, Germany’s DAX added 0.10% to 12,467.04 and the CAC added 0.21% to 5,277.88.
Meanwhile, Brent crude was up 0.37% to $51.79 per barrel on the ICE.
Global markets jumped during the previous session after centrist and europhile Emmanuel Macron went through to the second round and polls indicated that he will beat far-right eurosceptic rival Marine Le Pen to the Élysée on 7 May.
With less than two weeks to go to the final round of voting, Le Pen announced late on Monday that she has temporarily stepped down as leader of the Front National in a bid to re-brand and distance herself from the party to broaden her appeal.
Neil Wilson, senior market analyst at ETX Capital, said: "Global risks have dropped – the French election was a huge blot on the horizon for equity investors but is seems to be cleared - a Le Pen victory is possible but investors are giving her little to no chance. Her gamble to step away from the FN leadership to campaign as a unity candidate could pay off, but the arithmetic is still very much against her. A Macron misstep is still possible, but it’s his election to lose."
The euro was 0.71% higher against the dollar to 1.0944, 0.47% ahead versus the pound to 0.8527 and up 1.39% versus the yen at 142.37.
Wilson said that the French election makes the ECB more likely to consider tapering and a rate hike, but the bank is unlikely to be in a hurry as inflation remains disappointing.
While ECB president Mario Draghi has said that political risk is a "material" downside risk for the Eurozone, lower risks meant he might be more bullish.
"Have these vanished? Well not entirely but you have to think Draghi is going to be minded to start sounding a tad more bullish.
Tapering by September? It’s possible but the soggy inflation numbers just aren’t playing ball. It feels like we could be in for a good year of overly-optimistic taper talk ahead of each ECB meeting before we get anything like tightening," he said.
The ECB’s quarterly bank lending survey revealed on Tuesday that some Eurozone banks are set to tighten standards on loans to companies rather than ease them in the second quarter aided by low interest rates, although most are likely to keep them unchanged.
In corporate news, luxury fashion house Christian Dior climbed 11.09% on news that LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton will buy the company’s couture business for €6bn. Louis Vuitton gained 3.94%.
Ericsson dropped 2.62% after the Swedish telecommunications equipment maker reported a 10.9bn kroner ($1.24bn) loss due to restructuring and write-down costs.