PARIS: European shares ended flat on Wednesday, as losses in technology stocks countered gains fostered by upbeat earnings, while a strong forecast by drugmaker Novo Nordisk helped Copenhagen shares scale record highs.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index held steady at 485.67 at close, logging a 1.4% rise in January, its third consecutive monthly gain.
Heavyweight healthcare stocks were in the spotlight, advancing 0.5% with Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk adding 3.6% to notch an all-time high after Europe’s most valuable company forecast another year of double-digit growth.
The stock pushed Copenhagen’s OMX 20 to a fresh record high, closing 2.3% higher.
Also adding to the sector’s gains was GSK, which gained 2.0% after beating fourth quarter estimates.
Beijer Ref jumped 11.9% after the Swedish wholesaler of cooling technology reported quarterly sales above expectations and forecast continued growth in 2024, while Spanish lender Santander rose 2.1% after posting record-high profit for the last quarter of 2023, beating forecasts.
The European real estate index advanced 1.0%, lifted by a 6.3% rise in Germany’s TAG Immobilien after HSBC upgraded its rating to “buy”.
Swiss drugmaker Novartis fell 3.5% on missing estimates for fourth-quarter profit, while H&M slumped 12.4% to the bottom of the STOXX 600 after the Swedish fashion retailer revealed its sales for December and January fell by 4% compared with the previous year, while the company also announced a surprise CEO exit.
Technology, which houses most of Europe’s chipmakers, fell 0.6%, tracking losses in their US counterparts.
On the data front, French consumer prices rose 3.4% year-on-year in January, a touch above expectations, but inflation slowed from the previous month, according to preliminary data. A separate reading showed German inflation eased slightly further than expected in January to 3.1%.
“The economy has been pretty weak for about a year and the data today confirms a further decline in inflation in Europe,” said Joost van Leenders, senior investment strategist at Van Lanschot Kempen.
Government bond yields across Europe dipped tracking a strong rally in US Treasuries that pushed yields lower after U.S jobs data.
Investor attention will now shift to the Federal Reserve’s interest rate verdict, due at 1900 GMT, for clues regarding the timing of interest rate cuts in the world’s largest economy.
“When you look at the comments of Fed policymakers over the past weeks, they’ve pushed back against very early rate cuts ... I don’t think that (Fed Chair) Powell will want to get those expectations for a March cut back into the market,” added Van Lanschot Kempen’s Leenders.
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