European bourses down, brace for crucial Catalan meeting

11 Oct, 2017

European bourses ended the day slightly lower on Tuesday as investord braced themselves for a possible unilateral declaration of independence at the Catalan parliament, which, it is anticipated, would lead to turmoil on Spanish markets and beyond. Blue-chip indexes in Paris, Frankfurt and Milan closed flat, down 0.2 percent and 0.6 percent respectively, while Madrid's IBEX lagged European peers with a loss of 0.9 percent.
The pan-European STOXX 600 was flat, helped by gains in London's FTSE 100, which ended the day up 0.4 percent with strong gains among domestic banks. The British market "does offer a bit of sanctuary from the Catalan worries, which is doubtless weighing on European equities generally", Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG told Reuters.
Financial shares in Spain suffered, whith Banco Santander and Caixabank losing 3 and 2.2 percent. On the positive side, a Goldman Sachs' upgrade to "buy" boosted shares in Spanish wind turbine maker Siemens Gamesa up 3.4 percent. Analysts at the bank said the firm was the best positioned to benefit from strong growth in wind power capacity.
Strong results from luxury group LVMH, which fired the starting gun on third-quarter results season, helped support stocks across the consumer goods sector. Shares in the world' biggest luxury group rose 2.3 percent after it beat sales and revenue forecasts in its third quarter, setting a high hurdle for European luxury peers to beat.
Luxury brands Christian Dior, Gucci owner Kering rose 1.6 to 2.2 percent on the strong performance from the group Bernstein luxury analyst Mario Ortelli said is a "bellwether" for the industry. Swiss fragrance and flavours maker Givaudan jumped 3.1 percent and touched a record high during the session after the firm stuck to its 2020 targets and reported third-quarter sales up 5.7 percent, beating analysts' estimates.
"The strong Q3 growth gives Givaudan's investment case a further positive sentiment boost, which comes after worries on the negative impact of natural raw material price increases (vanilla, citrus, onions) on profitability," said Baader Helvea analysts.
Lufthansa benefited from a wide-ranging agreement signed with its main pilots union. Its shares rose by 2.5 percent. Provident Financial was the worst performer of the index, falling 7.8 percent after being fined over a marketing campaign by its subsidiary Vanquis Bank. Dassault Aviation shares fell 2.2 percent, with traders citing comments from the CEO over delays to its Falcon 5X business jet.
BAE Systems was down 0.3 percent after it said it would shed 2,000 jobs as new chief executive Charles Woodburn tries to shake up Britain's biggest defence contractor in the face of dwindling orders for the Typhoon fighter jet.

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