Europe midday: Shares up; LPP rebounds from Hindenburg claims
European were up on Monday as upbeat China data lifted sentiment, while investors looked ahead to an interest rate decision from the US Federal Reserve on Wednesday and Polish fashion retailer LPP rebounded from a critical report from short seller Hindenburg and 'buy' recommendations from Citibank.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 index was up 0.07% to 505.16, with all regional bourses up. Economists expect the US central bank to keep rates at 5.25-5.5%, while the Bank of England meets Thursday and is forecast to hold at 5.25%.
Traders will be looking at the Fed's "dot plots" chart to see what impact recent unexpectedly high-inflation readings have on the projected path of rate cuts.
"The chart of expectations will be closely scrutinised for any more conservative tweaks, which could spark negative sentiment. Wall Street closed down for the second session in a row on Friday, and trading looks set to be subdued as investors wait to gauge the attitudes of central bankers," said Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Susannah Streeter.
In a busy week for monetary policy makers, central bankers from Switzerland, Norway, Australia, Indonesia, Taiwan, Turkey, Brazil and Mexico will all meet.
Speculation was also mounting that the Bank of Japan was set to end eight years of negative interest rates on Tuesday and cease or amend its yield curve control policy.
CHINA UPBEAT, BUT PROPERTY WOES PERSIST
Official data from China showed upbeat economic data for the first two months of the year, beating expectations, but its troubled real estate sector still showed sluggishness.
Retail sales in January and February rose 5.5%, better than expectations of a 5.2% increase. China combines data for the first two months of the year to smooth out the effects of the Lunar New Year break.
Industrial production climbed 7%, beating forecasts of 5%, while fixed asset investment increased 4.2%, compared with estimates of 3.2%.
The real estate sector remained sluggish, with investment in real estate falling 9% in January-February compared to the same period a year earlier.
EZ INFLATION FALLS AGAIN IN FEB
Meanwhile in the eurozone, inflation in February was confirmed at 2.6%, down from 2.8% in January, according to official data released on Monday.
The rate compares with a figure of 8.5% a year earlier. Across the broader European Union, annual inflation was 2.8% in February 2024, down from 3.1% in January and 9.9% in 2023, said statistics agency Eurostat.
LPP BOUNCES BACK FROM HINDENBURG ATTACK
In equity news, LPP shares bounced back from the 36% crash last week after Hindenburg alleged that the divestment of its Russian assets was a "sham". The shares gained 30% on Monday as CEO Marek Piechocki sought to reassure investors that the company would not return to Russia and hinted at a possible share buyback subject to shareholder approval, while the Citi recommendation also helped.
Shares in Alstom surged 8% on news the company had been awarded a contract to supply the signalling, safety, and control systems for the new pink Metro line in the city of Porto in Portugal.
Reporting by Frank Prenesti for Sharecast.com