Europe midday: RBS, BASF push stocks lower as France election jitters seep in

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Sharecast News | 24 Feb, 2017

European stocks retreated on Friday, dragged lower by earnings from Royal Bank of Scotland and German chemical giant BASF, as well as market jitters about the prospect of a Marine Le Pen victory in France.

At midday, the benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 index was down 0.88% to 369.56, Germany’s DAX fell 1.27% to 11,795.14 and France’s CAC 40 was 1.33% weaker at 4,825.35.

Meanwhile, Brent crude was down 0.56% to $56.28 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate was 0.49% lower at $54.18.

The euro was up 0.16% against the dollar to 1.0599 and rose 0.26% versus the pound to 0.84499.

Mike van Dulken, head of research at Accendo Markets, said: “European equities are on the back foot into the weekend, continued profit-taking dragging indices from recent highs. This stems from more tempered optimism towards President Donald Trump tax changes; pudding wanted for proof. A weaker dollar following less hawkish US Federal Reserve minutes hinders Europe via reciprocal sterling and euro strength, despite continental election risk.

“Germany's DAX underperforms on a stronger euro hurting its many exporters and read-across from UK Banks, while Wall St outperforms, albeit still called to open lower this afternoon.”

Spreadex’s Connor Campbell said that “it appears that the continued uncertainty surrounding the French election – and more specifically the chance of a Marine Le Pen victory and what that would mean for the EU – is driving the region’s indices lower".

Investors were eyeing the upcoming presidential election in France as far-right candidate Le Pen has gained ground in recent polls, but it appears that French consumers are unfazed by the prospect of electoral shock in the upcoming election. Insee’s consumer confidence index was unchanged at 100 for the second straight month in February and is at its highest since 2007.

In corporate news, RBS fell 3.6% after reporting that its losses widened in the year to 31 December as the bank was hit by legacy issues. It posted a loss of £6.96bn for 2016, bigger than the £1.98bn the year before.

BASF fell 3.12% after the German chemicals firm said it is “cautiously optimistic for 2017” and posted better-than-expected fourth-quarter profit.

Standard Chartered lost 4.34% after it saw operating income fall in 2016 and continued to hold back on paying a dividend, but the Asia-focused bank reported better underlying profits and ended the year with income stable, lower costs and a much improved balance sheet.

Vivendi was down 3.91% on news that its chairman Vincent Bollore is being investigated for market manipulation by Italian prosecutors over the media company’s stake in Italian broadcaster Mediaset. The company also reported a 23% drop in annual operating profit late on Thursday.

On the upside, British Airways and Iberia parent International Consolidated Airlines Group flew 2.5% higher after it announced a new share buyback and reported improved profits in the fourth quarter of last year and guidance for continued improvement in 2017.

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