European equities were lifted by a clutch of strong earnings reports on Tuesday, although volumes were subdued as many preferred to wait for the outcome of the neck-and-neck US presidential election.
Tuesday's polls will determine whether incumbent Barack Obama or Republican challenger Mitt Romney are in charge of resolving the "fiscal cliff" of multi-billion dollar spending cuts and tax increases, which threatens to plunge the United States back into recession next year.
The fate of the US economy has become increasingly key for European companies, such as Adecco, as the euro zone crisis crushes domestic growth. Shares in the staffing group added 3.2 percent after stronger sales in North America compensated for a continuing slowdown in Europe, enabling it to beat expectations on third quarter profit.
"If you look at pockets of strength within Europe it's companies that are exposed to the US and to Asia," said Stephen Walker, head of equities research and market strategy at Ashcourt Rowan.
The gains in Adecco, coupled with a strong performance in the insurance sector after an outlook upgrade by Hannover Re helped the FTSEurofirst 300 to close 0.5 percent higher at 1,114.77 points.
The EuroSTOXX 50 added 0.7 percent to 2,535.94 points with volumes, at just 57 percent of the 90-day daily average on EuroSTOXX 50, the fourth lowest so far this year.
"The market has a bit of a firmer tone today ... (but) I doubt people are taking big positions prior to the elections. Concerns have clearly risen over the fiscal cliff," said Tristan Hanson, head of asset allocation at Ashburton.
The uncertainty of the election and the fiscal cliff has sent European equities investors to the options market in search of protection. The put/call ratio on the EuroSTOXX 50, which compares how many downside options are bought compared to upside ones, has climbed to its highest since August.
Activity has been particularly strong in the November contract, where open interest in puts has surged by 22 percent in the past fortnight, according to data from Eurex. Strikes in the 2,500 to 2,200 points range have been most popular, suggesting investors are factoring in a possible fall in the index of some 300 points or more.
The increased hedging activity come as European equities enter the eighth weak of range trading, in which the market has been stuck after hitting multi-month peaks in mid-September.
Since then, broad pan-European STOXX 600 index has risen in 18 sessions and fallen in 19, with both moves averaging around 0.6 percent, but volumes have been on average 8 percent stronger on the up days, according to Reuters calculations.
From a technical point of view, the volumes, along with other indicators, suggest the door remains open for more gains.
"The overall uptrend is still intact, the classic indicators are still in that position, with the 50-day moving average above the 200-day," according to Riccardo Ronco, head of technical analysis at Aviate Global.
Comments
Comments are closed.