Europe midday: Shares waver after disappointing German data as investors await ECB minutes
European stocks wavered in a tight range as investors digested another set of disappointing German data, ahead of the release of minutes from the European Central Bank’s latest policy meeting.
At midday, the benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 index was flat, France’s CAC was down 0.1% and Germany’s DAX was up 0.1%.
In London, the FTSE 100 was 0.1% higher as the Bank of England kept interest rates on hold at 0.5% and left the size of its asset purchase programme unchanged at £375bn, as expected.
Thursday saw the release of more disappointing data out of Germany. Figures from the Federal Statistics Office showed exports fell by the biggest amount since 2009. Seasonally-adjusted exports dropped 5.2% in August from July, while imports fell by 3.1%.
On the corporate front, Deutsche Bank managed to reverse early losses to trade a little higher after it said late on Wednesday that it expects to book an impairment of around€5.8bn in the third quarter for a write-down related to its corporate banking unit. The bank also said it will take an impairment on its stake in China’s Hua Xia Bank and will set money aside around €1.2bn for litigation. As a result, DB will either reduce or suspend the dividend for 2015.
Some analysts argued that the scrapping of the dividend would allow the bank to avoid a capital increase.
Anheuser-Busch InBev hit back at SABMiller on Thursday after the London-listed brewer rebuffed its third approach, calling on its shareholders to push the board to engage in talks. AB InBev said it was surprised that the board of SABMiller continues to say that its proposal “still very substantially undervalues” the company, adding that this lacks credibility.
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles rose after the company struck a deal with United Auto Workers, averting a strike that could have shut down production at US plants.
Later in the day, investors will turn their attention to the release of the European Central Bank’s monetary policy meeting accounts from the start of September.
“The accounts should offer detailed insight into the ECBs decision making last month which could prove important in the coming months if it is planning to ease monetary policy further, as is becoming increasingly likely,” said Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at Oanda.
”It’s been almost a year since the ECB announced its asset purchase program and so far, the impact has been minimal. For most of this year we have seen small amounts of inflation but even that slipped back into negative territory last month. The risks and challenges facing the ECB when it made its decision are still largely there and to make matters worse, the euro is back trading at more elevated levels.”
The latest minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee are also due, after the European close.
Deutsche Bank analyst Jim Reid said that while the FOMC minutes would normally be the primary focus for markets on any given day, it’s unlikely to be the case this time around.
“It’s fair to say that these minutes are pretty stale now given the latest jobs report, the drop in market expectations for a Fed hike this year and the recent trade data numbers and the implications of those for US GDP growth,” said Reid.
Still to come on the data front, US initial jobless claims are on tap at 1330 BST.