Europe midday: Shares go red despite M&S results, ICA merger
European equities slipped into the red on Wednesday as strong earnings from Britain’s Marks & Spencer and a proposed buyout of Swedish grocery chain ICA Gruppen drove sentiment weren't enough to offset inflationary worries.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 index was down 0.15% after Wall Street ended its multi-day rally, and Chinese stocks fell on the back of weak inflation data.
China's factory gate prices surged to a 26-year high in October amid a power crisis, according to figures released on Wednesday by the National Bureau of Statistics.
Producer price inflation rose from 10.7% year-on-year in September to 13.5%, versus expectations for 12.3%.
Meanwhile, consumer price inflation rose to a 13-month high of 1.5% in October from 0.7% the month before. This was due partly to a rise in fuel price inflation to a new high of 31.4% from 22.8%.
In equity news, Marks & Spencer shares surged more than 11% after the retailer lifted guidance and reported better-than-expected interim earnings.
ICA Gruppen shares were also in demand after its main owner ICA-handlarnas Forbund and pension fund AMF said they had made a recommended offer for the Swedish grocery retailer that values it at 107.4 billion kronor ($12.5bn).
Alstom shares were up after the train maker reported a smaller-than-expected cash outflow for the first half of its financial year.
UK broadcaster ITV gained more than 12% as the company said it expected to post record full-year advertising revenue as the local economy bounced back from the Covid pandemic.
On the downside, digital advertising group S4 Capital plunged 11.2% despite the reporting a 42% rise in third quarter like-for-like gross profit.
Online food delivery stocks HelloFresh, Just Eat Takeaway.com and Delivery Hero were all lower after US peer DoorDash said it would buy Finland-based rival Wolt Enterprises in a deal valued at about €7bn.