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European Equities: A Week in Review

In This Article:

The Majors

It was a week in the green for the European majors, with the DAX30 rallying by 2.27% to lead the way. The EuroStoxx600 and CAC40 saw more modest gains of 1.2% and 0.92% respectively.

Geopolitical risk and monetary policy were the key drivers throughout the week.

Geopolitics

A material shift in rhetoric from both China and the U.S on trade provided the majors and the DAX, in particular, with strong support.

News of China removing certain U.S goods from planned retaliatory tariffs provided early support. The U.S then announced a delay in U.S tariffs on Chinese goods from 1st October to 15th October. The moves raised hopes of progress on trade talks next month.

On Thursday, the U.S President also spoke of a willingness to form an interim trade agreement with China. It was quite a turnaround from his previous unwillingness to have any agreements with China on trade…

From the UK, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s troubles in Parliament was also positive for the majors. While the British PM continued to talk of leaving the EU, with or without a deal, legislation was passed to force the PM to request an extension should no deal be in place by 19th October.

The extension would give Britain until January of next year to, either renegotiate with the EU or give the electorate a 2nd referendum.

From a market perspective, a fall in the odds of Britain leaving without a deal was key ahead of Parliament’s suspension.

Monetary Policy

Adding to the upside for the European majors and bourses elsewhere, was an expectation of support from the ECB and the FED.

On Thursday, the ECB delivered with a 10 basis point deposit rate cut -0.5%, while also reintroducing the asset purchasing program.  Whilst the markets had anticipated the rate cut, there had been some uncertainty over the asset purchasing program.

The Stats

It was a relatively busy week on the Eurozone economic calendar. Having seen some quite dire numbers out of Germany of late, better than forecast trade data provided the DAX with support on Monday.

Germany’s trade surplus widened from €18.1bn to €20.2bn in July. The rise led to the Eurozone’s trade surplus widening from €20.6bn to €24.8bn.

From elsewhere, stats were less impressive, however, with Italy reporting a 0.7% fall in industrial production in July. French industrial production rose by 0.3%, following a 2.3% slide in June, but fell short of a forecasted 0.5% increase.

For the Eurozone, industrial production fell by 0.4%, following a 1.6% slide in June. The figures continued to portray weakness in the manufacturing sector going into the 3rd quarter.