European stocks retreat, tracking global risk-off sentiment; Travis Perkins down 10%

KEY POINTS

  • Earnings remain a key driver of individual share price movement. BP, Ferrari, Maersk and Uniper were among the major European companies reporting before the bell on Tuesday.
  • The pan-European Stoxx 600 finished Monday’s trading session fractionally lower to begin August, after closing out its best month since November 2020.

LONDON — European markets pulled back slightly on Tuesday, tracking risk-off sentiment globally as investors assess whether last month’s rally has further to run.

TICKER  COMPANY  NAME  PRICE  CHANGE  %CHANGE  VOLUME 
.FTSE FTSE 100 *FTSE 7414.82 1.4 0.02 92717156
.GDAXI DAX *DAX 13390.1 -89.53 -0.66 11231381
.FCHI CAC 40 Index CAC 6405.81 -31.05 -0.48 11821033

 

The pan-European Stoxx 600 dropped 0.7% in early trade, with basic resources shedding 1.8% to lead losses as almost all sectors and major bourses slid into the red.

The European blue chip index finished Monday’s trading session fractionally lower to begin August, after closing out its best month since November 2020.

Earnings remain a key driver of individual share price movement. BP, Ferrari, Maersk and Uniper were among the major European companies reporting before the bell on Tuesday.

U.K. oil giant BP boosted its dividend as it posted bumper second-quarter profits, benefitting from a surge in commodity prices. Second-quarter underlying replacement cost profit, used as a proxy for net profit, came in at $8.5 billion. BP shares climbed 3.7% in early trade.

At the top of the Stoxx 600, Austria’s Raiffeisen Bank International rose 5.5% after posting a jump in first-half net profit.

At the bottom of the index, shares of British builders’ merchant Travis Perkins plunged more than 10% after the company reported a fall in first-half profit.

Shares in Asia-Pacific retreated overnight, with mainland Chinese markets leading losses as geopolitical tensions rose over U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s possible visit to Taiwan.

U.S. stock futures fell in early premarket trading after slipping lower to start the month, with not all investors convinced that the pain for risk assets is truly over.

The dollar and U.S. long-term Treasury yields declined on concerns about Pelosi’s Taiwan visit and weak data out of the United States, where data on Monday showed that manufacturing activity weakened in June, furthering fears of a global recession.

Oil also retreated as manufacturing data showed weakness in several major economies.

The first Ukrainian ship — bound for Lebanon — to carry grain through the Black Sea since the Russian invasion left the port of Odesa on Monday under a safe passage deal, offering some hope in the face of a deepening global food crisis.

 

Source: CNBC

 

 

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