Market Update

Europe Movers: Burberry Group, BT Group, Deutsche Bank, EasyJet, Premier Foods, Royal Mail

Bridgette Randall
18 May, 2023
Frankfurt

Burberry Group Plc decreased 5.7% to 2,377.0 pence after the UK-based luxury apparel and accessories company reported same store sales increased 16% from a year ago. 

Revenue in the fiscal year ending on April 1, 2023 increased 10% to £3.0 billion from £2.8 billion a a year ago. 

Profit after-tax increased 24% to £634 million from £511 million and diluted earnings per share expanded 29% to 126.3 pence from 97.7 pence a year ago. 

For the year comparable store sales rose 7% and the 13% jump in Mainland China lifted comparable store sales to 16% in the fourth quartet. 

The company reiterated its high single digit annual growth rate target for the fiscal year 2024 and adjusted operating margin of 20% in constant currencies. 

BT Group Class A plunged 7.3% to 137.25 pence despite the UK-based telecom group reporting 5% increase in adjusted annual core earnings. 

The telecom company also announced a plan to eliminate 55,000 jobs. 

Revenue in the financial year ending in March 2023 declined 1% to £20.6 billion and after-tax profit soared 50% to £1.9 billion from £1.2 billion a year ago. 

The company held its dividend payout at 7 pence a share and capital expenditure declined 4% to £5.0 billion.  

Deutsche Bank AG increased 3.5% to €9.72 after Germany's largest bank settled a lawsuit for $75 million brought by women who alleged that the bank facilitated sex trafficking activities of the late Jeffrey Epstein. 

EasyJet Plc increased 0.8% to 524.60 pence after the deep discount airline operator narrowed its first-half loss on rising international traffic. 

The company said passengers transported increased 41% to 33.1 million in the first-half from 23.1 million in the corresponding period a year ago. 

Revenue in the first-half increased to £2.7 billion from £1.5 billion and pre-tax loss shrank to £411 million from £545 million a year ago. 

International Distribution Services Plc declined 0.7% to 220.60 pence after the parent of Royal Mail reported an annual adjusted operating loss of £419 million. 

Premier Foods Plc advanced 3.9% to 134.64 pence after the company posted strong annual profit and increased its dividend. 

Revenue in the first quarter increased 6% to £197 million from £185.9 million a year ago. 

The company reiterated its full-year outlook. 

New Highs In DAX and CAC-40 Indexes, Spain and Italy Trade Balances Improved

Bridgette Randall
18 May, 2023
Frankfurt

European stock markets rebounded in light trading after U.S. debt ceiling talk picked up pace. 

Trading was light after financial markets were closed in Nordic countries and Switzerland. 

Benchmark indexes in Germany and France traded at new highs and surpassed the previous peaks in January 2022. 

Markets advanced after the U.S. President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy vowed to avoid the government default. 

Congressional leaders and Biden are expected to announce an agreement that will permit the lifting of the debt ceiling from $31.4 trillion. 

However, any agreement still needs to be approved by the U.S. House and the Senate in the next two to three weeks before the federal government runs out of funds. 

 

Spain's Trade Deficit Narrowed In March 

Spain's trade deficit narrowed in March to €0.16 billion after exports increased 17.7% from a year ago to €38.9 billion and imports jumped 3.6% to €39.09 billion.  

Exports to the European Union surged 15.4%, the United Kingdom increased 21.3%, the United States advanced 27.9%, and Latin America soared 62.7%. Exports to China increased 42.6% and Japan decreased 5.6%. 

In the first three months of 2023, exports soared 14.6% to €102.6 billion and imports decreased 6.8% to €109.2 billion resulting in a trade deficit of €6.6 billion. 

 

Italy's Trade Surplus Expanded In March 

Italy's international trade swung to a surplus of €7.5 billion in March from a deficit of €0.76 billion a year ago, the statistical office Istat reported Wednesday. 

The trade surplus accelerated from €2.1 billion in February after non-energy products exports expanded in the month. 

Trade surplus was the largest since July 2021, when the surplus reached a record high of €8.2 billion. 

Exports rose at a slower pace of 4.7% from a 10.4% rise in March and imports declined 9.8% reversing an increase of 3.2% in the previous month. 

On a seasonally adjusted basis, exports declined 2.3% and imports fell 6.5%, lifting the surplus in March to €5.54 billion from €3.5 billion in February.  

 

Europe Indexes & Yields 

The DAX index increased 1.5% to 16,196.05,  the CAC-40 index rose 0.9% to 7,462.45., and the FTSE 100 index advanced 0.6% to 7,771.16.

The yield on 10-year German Bunds inched up to 2.39%, French bonds traded higher to 2.98%, the UK gilts inched higher to 3.89% and Italian bonds increased to 4.25%.

The euro edged lower to $1.081, the British pound to $1.245 and the Swiss franc to 90.36 cents.

Brent crude decreased 41 cents to $76.54 a barrel and the Dutch TTF natural gas decreased €1.06 to €30.96 per MWh.

 

Europe Stock Movers 

Deutsche Bank AG increased 3.5% to €9.72 after Germany's largest bank settled a lawsuit for $75 million brought by women who alleged that the bank facilitated sex trafficking activities of the late Jeffrey Epstein. 

Burberry Group Plc decreased 5.7% to 2,377.0 pence after the UK-based luxury apparel and accessories company reported same store sales increased 16% from a year ago. 

EasyJet Plc increased 0.8% to 524.60 pence after the deep discount airline operator narrowed its first-half loss on rising international traffic. 

BT Group Class A stock plunged 7.3% to 137.25 pence despite the UK-based telecom group reporting 5% increase in adjusted annual core earnings. 

The telecom company also announced a plan to eliminate 55,000 jobs. 

International Distribution Services Plc declined 0.7% to 220.60 pence after the parent of Royal Mail reported an annual adjusted operating loss of £419 million. 

Premier Foods Plc advanced 3.9% to 134.64 pence after the company posted strong annual profit and increased its dividend. 

 

Weekly Mortgage Applications Declined 5.7%

Brian Turner
17 May, 2023
New York City

Applications for new mortgages declined 5.7% in the week ending on May 12, reversing an increase of 6.3% in the previous week, reported Mortgage Bankers Association Wednesday. 

Seasonally adjusted composite index declined from the previous week and unadjusted index decreased 6.0%.

The Refinance Index decreased 8% from the previous week and was 43% lower than the same week one year ago. 

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances of $726,200 or less increased to 6.57% from 6.48%, with points including origination fee held at 0.61% for 80% loan-to-value ratio loans.

Higher Rates and Prices Weigh On Housing Market

Brian Turner
17 May, 2023
New York City

Housing starts advanced 2.2%, building permits declined 1.5% and completions dropped 10.4% in April, the U.S. Census Bureau reported Wednesday. 

Seasonally adjusted building permits increased to an annual rate of 1.416 million,  housing starts to 1.401 million and completions to 1.375 million. 

Building permits declined 21.1%, starts fell 22.3% and completions rose 1% from a year ago. 

Higher home price and elevated mortgage rates continue to weigh on the housing market. 

Single-family housing permits increased 3.1% to 855,000 units, housing starts rose 1.6% to 846,000 and housing completions fell 6.5% to 971,000. 

 

S&P 500 and Nasdaq Rebound 1% After Biden and McCarthy Vow to Avoid Default

Barry Adams
17 May, 2023
New York City

Stocks scaled higher after negotiating parities showed willingness to compromise and vowed to avoid catastrophic debt default. 

Benchmark indexes inched higher after President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy offered optimism after the meeting on Tuesday. 

President Biden echoed positive sentiment just before he departed to Japan to attend a meeting of G7 leaders.  

Moreover, the White House said President Biden canceled the second leg of an international trip after completing the meeting with G7 leaders in Japan. 

President Biden was scheduled to visit Papua New Guinea and Australia and meet leaders of Australia, Japan and India.  

President Biden and congressional leaders are hoping to finalize an agreement by this weekend and lift the current debt ceiling of $31.4 trillion. 

The lifting of the debt ceiling does not allow the government to increase its spending but finances the spending plan that is already approved by the U.S. Congress and the president. 

Despite the looming debt default crisis, three leading rating agencies are silent. 

S&P Global, Moody's and Fitch are quick to express their opinion or threaten a debt rating revision in a similar situation of any other nation other than the U.S. 

The silence of three rating agencies and lack of their stance on the U.S. government debt in the throes of debt negotiations also highlight their double standards when it comes to rating a debt issued by other nations. 

Investors are hoping that a clarity on debt ceiling may calm market sentiment and keep focus on economic growth and rate path. 

The latest data on the housing market showed higher prices and rising interest rates dented housing starts and building permits in April.  

 

Higher Rates and Prices Weigh On Housing Market 

Housing starts advanced 2.2%, building permits declined 1.5% and completions dropped 10.4% in April, the U.S. Census Bureau reported Wednesday. 

Seasonally adjusted building permits increased to an annual rate of 1.416 million,  housing starts to 1.401 million and completions to 1.375 million. 

Building permits declined 21.1%, starts fell 22.3% and completions rose 1% from a year ago. 

Higher home price and elevated mortgage rates continue to weigh on the housing market. 

Single-family housing permits increased 3.1% to 855,000 units, housing starts rose 1.6% to 846,000 and housing completions fell 6.5% to 971,000. 

 

Mortgage Applications Declined 5.7% 

Applications for new mortgages declined 5.7% in the week ending on May 12, reversing an increase of 6.3% in the previous week, reported Mortgage Bankers Association Wednesday. 

Seasonally adjusted composite index declined from the previous week and unadjusted index decreased 6.0%.

The Refinance Index decreased 8% from the previous week and was 43% lower than the same week one year ago. 

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances of $726,200 or less increased to 6.57% from 6.48%, with points including origination fee held at 0.61% for 80% loan-to-value ratio loans.

 

U.S. Indexes & Yields 

The S&P 500 index increased 1.15% to 4,159.80 and the Nasdaq Composite rose 1.24% to 12,498.23.

The yield on 2-year Treasury notes increased to 4.11%, 10-year Treasury notes edged up to 3.54% and 30-year Treasury bonds held at 3.86%. 

Crude oil rose $1.90 to $72.75 a barrel and natural gas prices rose 3 cents to $2.40 a thermal unit. 

 

U.S. Stock Movers 

Target Corp increased 1.7% to $159.62 after the retailer reported only 0.6% increase in revenue to $25.32 billion. Store traffic increased 0.9% on top of 3.9% in the quarter a year ago. 

Net income declined 5.8% to $950 million from $1.0 billion and diluted earnings per share fell to $2.05 from $2.16 a year ago. 

EVgo Inc dropped 13.4% to $4.96 after the electric vehicle charging stations network operator reported a $125 million secondary offering. 

Keysights Technologies Inc jumped 7.7% to $157.74 after the company reported higher-than-expected fiscal second quarter adjusted earnings and offered a positive outlook for the current quarter. 

 

European Markets Hold After Inflation Stayed Near Record High 

European markets hugged the flatline after consumer inflation accelerated in April and automobile sales in April slowed from the previous month. 

Stocks were in a holding pattern after inflation accelerated in April despite the cooling of energy prices in the European Union as inflation but service prices rose at a faster pace. 

Automobile stocks advanced after unit sales rose in April and electric vehicles increased market share. 

Investors remained cautious and awaited the outcome of the debt ceiling talks in the U.S. as president Joe Biden and congressional leaders struggled to find a common ground. 

Despite the debt ceiling talks uncertainties, global markets are hoping that the U.S. lawmakers will lift the debt ceiling higher and avoid the U.S. government default. 

The U.S. Treasury is estimated to run out of funds in about three weeks, yet three leading rating agencies S&P Global, Moody's and Fitch have been silent. 

 

Consumer Inflation Accelerated In April

Consumer price inflation in the Euro Are increased to 7.0% in April, Eurostat reported Wednesday.

Inflation accelerated from a 13-month low of 6.9% in March after energy prices rebounded to 2.4% increase in April from 0.9% decline in March and cost of services accelerated to 5.2% from 5.1%. 

Core inflation, which excludes food, energy, alcohol and tobacco, slowed to 5.6% in April from the record high 5.7% in March.  

Hungary led the region with consumer price inflation of 24.5%, followed by 15% in Latvia, 14.3% in Czechia, and 14.% in Slovakia. 

Annual inflation in Italy was 8.7%, Germany 7.6%, France 6.9% and Spain 3.8%.  

 

EU Car Registration Growth In April Slowed from March 

Car registration in the European Union soared 17.2% to 803,188 in April, the European Automobile Manufacturers Association reported Wednesday. 

Passenger car sales increased for the ninth month in a row and sales in the first four months to April rose 17.8% from a year ago to 3.5 million, still down 22.8% from the same period in 2019.  

Among the four largest markets in the European Union, unit sales surged 33.7% in Spain, 26.9% in Italy, 16.7% in France and 7.9% in Germany.   

Battery electric car share of the market increased to 11.8% from 9.1%, hybrid car share rose to 24.8% and petrol cars led by 38.2%. 

 

Europe Indexes & Yields 

The DAX index increased 0.5% to 15,951.14, the CAC-40 index fell 0.09% to 7,399.44 and the FTSE 100 index advanced 0.40% to 7,723.39. 

The yield on 10-year German Bunds inched up to 2.31%, French bonds traded slightly higher to 2.89%, the UK gilts inched lower to 3.79% and Italian bonds increased to 4.18%.

The euro edged lower to $1.082, the British pound to $1.244 and the Swiss franc to 89.91 cents.

Brent crude increased $1.90 to $76.84 a barrel and the Dutch TTF natural gas increased €0.05 to €31.78 per MWh.

 

Europe Stock Movers 

AstraZeneca increased 0.6% to 12,146.0 pence after the drug maker reported positive results in the discovery of a lung cancer trial. 

SAP SE advanced 1.6% to €123.28 after the German software company announced a stock repurchase program of up to €5 billion.  

Commerzbank AG declined 6.6% to €9.23 despite the German lender saying net income in the first quarter nearly doubled. 

London Stock Exchange Group Plc dropped 3.5% to 8,172.0 pence after a consortium of investors sold stocks in the exchange operator worth about £2.7 billion.  

British Land Company PLC decreased 5.2% to 358.30 pence after the company reported a pre-tax loss in the fiscal year 2023 ending in March. 

JD Sports Fashion Plc declined 5.8% to 160.45 pence after the specialty retailer said pre-tax income declined the fiscal year 2023. 

Siemens AG increased 2.5% to €153.42 after the Germany based industrial engineering company lifted its annual sales outlook on stronger order inflow and higher-than-expected profit in the fiscal second quarter. 

 

Japan's GDP Expanded In the First Quarter

Japan's economy expanded at an annual pace of 1.6% in the first quarter, the Cabinet Office reported Wednesday.

The faster than expected economic growth bodes well for the third largest economy of the world, which has struggled with five quarters of contraction in the last nine quarters.

Rising consumer and business spending were the key drivers of growth in the first quarter, but the international trade provided a headwind as exports of automobiles and semiconductor machinery lagged.  

The Nikkei 225 index closed up 0.8% to 30,093.59 and inched closer to a 32-year high reached seven months ago on September 17, 2021. 

In other Asian markets, the Sensex index in Mumbai dropped 0.6%, the Hang Seng index in Hong Kong dropped 2.1% and the Shanghai Composite index declined 0.2%. 

Movers: Container Store, Doximity, EVgo, Keysights, Target Corp

Scott Peters
17 May, 2023
New York City

Target Corp increased 1.7% to $159.62 after the retailer reported only 0.6% increase in revenue to $25.32 billion. Store traffic increased 0.9% on top of 3.9% in the quarter a year ago. 

Net income declined 5.8% to $950 million from $1.0 billion and diluted earnings per share fell to $2.05 from $2.16 a year ago. 

EVgo Inc dropped 13.4% to $4.96 after the electric vehicle charging stations network operator reported a $125 million secondary offering with an option to raise additional $18 million. 

The company hopes to sell between 94 million and 97 million shares in the secondary offering. 

Revenue in the first quarter increased 229% to $25.3 million and net loss shrank to $49 million from $55.2 million and diluted losses pre share fell to 18 cents from 21 cents a year ago. 

Keysights Technologies Inc jumped 7.7% to $157.74 after the company reported higher-than-expected fiscal second quarter adjusted earnings and offered a positive outlook for the current quarter. 

Doximity Inc declined 5.5% to $32.02 after the company reported mixed quarterly results in the fiscal fourth quarter ending in March. 

Revenue in the quartet increased 18% to $111.0 million from $97.0 million and net income dropped to $30.7 million from $36.7 million and diluted earnings per share declined to 14 cents from 20 cents a year ago. 

The company forecasted revenue in the fiscal first quarter ending in June between $106.5 million and $107.5 million and for the full-year between $500 million and $506 million. 

The company forecasted adjusted EBITDA in the June quarter between $39 million and $40.0 million and for the fiscal year 2024 between $216 million and $222 million. 

The Container Store Group Inc fell 5.9% to $2.55 after the specialty retailer reported a decline in revenue. 

Revenue in the first quarter declined to $259.7 million from $356.7 million and the company swung to a net loss of $189.3 million from a profit of $23.2 million and diluted earnings per share was ($3.85) compared to 46 cents a year ago.    

The retailer forecasted revenue in the fiscal first quarter ending in June between $200 million and $210 million and comparable sales to fall between 19% and 23%. 

The company also estimated net loss between 16 cents and 10 cents per share. 

For the fiscal year 2024, the retailer forecasted revenue between $885 million and $900 million and net income between 7 cents and 17 cents per share and comparable sales to decline in "mid to high teens."  

Optimism Returned to Debt ceiling Talks, Housing Activities Fall

Barry Adams
17 May, 2023
New York City

Stocks traded higher after both sides signaled easier path to an agreement and vowed to avoid catastrophic debt default. 

Benchmark indexes inched higher after President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy offered optimism after a meeting on Tuesday. 

The White House said President Biden canceled the second leg of an international trip after completing the meeting with G7 leaders in Japan. 

President Biden was scheduled to visit Papua New Guinea and Australia and meet leaders of Australia, Japan and India.  

President Biden and congressional leaders are hoping to have an agreement by this weekend and lift the current debt ceiling of $31.4 trillion. 

Investors are hoping that a clarity on debt ceiling may calm market sentiment and keep focus on economic growth and rate path. 

The latest data on the housing market showed higher prices and rising interest rates are denting housing starts and building permits. 

 

Higher Rates and Prices Weigh On Housing Market 

Housing starts advanced 2.2%, building permits declined 1.5% and completions dropped 10.4% in April, the U.S. Census Bureau reported Wednesday. 

Seasonally adjusted building permits increased to an annual rate of 1.416 million,  housing starts to 1.401 million and completions to 1.375 million. 

Building permits declined 21.1%, starts fell 22.3% and completions rose 1% from a year ago. 

Higher home price and elevated mortgage rates continue to weigh on the housing market. 

Single-family housing permits increased 3.1% to 855,000 units, housing starts rose 1.6% to 846,000 and housing completions fell 6.5% to 971,000. 

 

Mortgage Applications Declined 5.7% 

Applications for new mortgages declined 5.7% in the week ending on May 12, reversing an increase of 6.3% in the previous week, reported Mortgage Bankers Association Wednesday. 

Seasonally adjusted composite index declined from the previous week and unadjusted index decreased 6.0%.

The Refinance Index decreased 8% from the previous week and was 43% lower than the same week one year ago. 

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances of $726,200 or less increased to 6.57% from 6.48%, with points including origination fee held at 0.61% for 80% loan-to-value ratio loans.

 

U.S. Indexes & Yields 

The S&P 500 index increased 0.25% to 4,125.06 and the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.07% to 12,355.94.

The yield on 2-year Treasury notes increased to 4.11%, 10-year Treasury notes edged up to 3.54% and 30-year Treasury bonds held at 3.86%. 

Crude oil rose $0.80 to $71.65 a barrel and natural gas prices fell 3 cents to $2.33 a thermal unit. 

 

U.S. Stock Movers 

Target Corp increased 1.7% to $159.62 after the retailer reported only 0.6% increase in revenue to $25.32 billion. Store traffic increased 0.9% on top of 3.9% in the quarter a year ago. 

Net income declined 5.8% to $950 million from $1.0 billion and diluted earnings per share fell to $2.05 from $2.16 a year ago. 

EVgo Inc dropped 13.4% to $4.96 after the electric vehicle charging stations network operator reported a $125 million secondary offering. 

Keysights Technologies Inc jumped 7.7% to $157.74 after the company reported higher-than-expected fiscal second quarter adjusted earnings and offered a positive outlook for the current quarter. 

 

Europe Movers: AstraZeneca, British Land, Commerzbank, Euronext, JD Sports, London Stock Exchange, SAP AG, Siemens, UBS

Bridgette Randall
17 May, 2023
Frankfurt

AstraZeneca increased 0.6% to 12,146.0 pence after the drug maker reported positive results in the discovery of a lung cancer trial. 

SAP SE advanced 1.6% to €123.28 after the German software company announced a stock repurchase program of up to €5 billion.  

The company estimated cloud revenue in 2025 of more than €21.5 billion and total revenue of more than €37.5 billion and free cash flow of €7.5 billion. 

The company announced mid-term financial estimates at its SAP Sapphire conference for analysts in Orlando, Florida. 

Commerzbank AG declined 6.6% to €9.23 despite the German lender saying net income in the first quarter nearly doubled. 

London Stock Exchange Group Plc dropped 3.5% to 8,172.0 pence after a consortium of investors sold stocks in the exchange operator worth about £2.7 billion.  

British Land Company PLC decreased 5.2% to 358.30 pence after the company reported a pre-tax loss in the fiscal year 2023 ending in March. 

Net rental income increased to £446 million from £425 million and the real estate company swung to a net loss of £1.03 billion from £965 million and basic earnings per share was (112.0) pence compared to 103.8 pence a year ago. 

JD Sports Fashion Plc declined 5.8% to 160.45 pence after the specialty retailer said pre-tax income declined the fiscal year 2023 ending in January. 

Revenue increased to 10.1 billion from 8.5 billion and profit after-tax decreased to 440.9 million from 654.7 million and basic earnings per share dropped to 2.76 pence from 7.17 pence a year ago. 

Siemens AG increased 2.5% to €153.42 after the Germany based industrial engineering company lifted its annual sales outlook on stronger order inflow and higher-than-expected profit in the fiscal second quarter. 

Revenue in the second quarter increased 14% from a year ago to €19.4 billion and new orders rose 13% to €23.6 billion, driven by substantially higher volume from large orders in Mobility which included a €2.9  billion order for locomotives and associated maintenance in India. 

The book-to-bill ratio was 1.22. 

Net income soared to €3.6 billion from €1.2 billion a year ago and earnings per share rose to €4.39 from €1.29 a year ago. 

Net income in the quarter was helped by one-time gain of €1.6 billion from reversal of an impairment of Siemens’ stake in Siemens Energy AG. 

Euronext SE declined 3.2% to €67.20 after the financial exchange operator reported 11.7% decline in foreign exchange revenue in the first quarter. 

UBS Group AG increased 1.7% to CHF17.22  after the Swiss bank said it expects to take a loss of $17.1 billion linked to the takeover of Credit Suisse AG. 

 

Eurozone Core Inflation Stayed Near Record High, EU Car Registration Growth Slowed

Bridgette Randall
17 May, 2023
Frankfurt

European markets hugged the flatline after consumer inflation accelerated in April and automobile sales in April slowed from the previous month. 

Stocks were in a holding pattern after inflation accelerated in April despite the cooling of energy prices in the European Union as inflation but service prices rose at a faster pace. 

Automobile stocks advanced after unit sales rose in April and electric vehicles increased market share. 

Investors remained cautious and awaited the outcome of the debt ceiling talks in the U.S. as president Joe Biden and congressional leaders struggled to find a common ground. 

Despite the debt ceiling talks uncertainties, global markets are hoping that the U.S. lawmakers will lift the debt ceiling higher and avoid the U.S. government default. 

The U.S. Treasury is estimated to run out of funds in about three weeks, yet three leading rating agencies S&P Global, Moody's and Fitch have been silent. 

 

Core Inflation Stays Near Record High 

Consumer price inflation in the Euro Are increased to 7.0% in April, Eurostat reported Wednesday.

Inflation accelerated from a 13-month low of 6.9% in March after energy prices rebounded to 2.4% increase in April from 0.9% decline in March and cost of services accelerated to 5.2% from 5.1%. 

Core inflation, which excludes food, energy, alcohol and tobacco, slowed to 5.6% in April from the record high 5.7% in March.  

Hungary led the region with consumer price inflation of 24.5%, followed by 15% in Latvia, 14.3% in Czechia, and 14.% in Slovakia. 

Annual inflation in Italy was 8.7%, Germany 7.6%, France 6.9% and Spain 3.8%.  

 

EU Car Registration Growth In April Slowed from March 

Car registration in the European Union soared 17.2% to 803,188 in April, the European Automobile Manufacturers Association reported Wednesday. 

Passenger car sales increased for the ninth month in a row and sales in the first four months to April rose 17.8% from a year ago to 3.5 million, still down 22.8% from the same period in 2019.  

Among the four largest markets in the European Union, unit sales surged 33.7% in Spain, 26.9% in Italy, 16.7% in France and 7.9% in Germany.   

Battery electric car share of the market increased to 11.8% from 9.1%, hybrid car share rose to 24.8% and petrol cars led by 38.2%. 

 

Europe Indexes & Yields 

The DAX index increased 0.3% to 15,943.40, the CAC-40 index fell 0.2% to 7,395.27 and the FTSE 100 index advanced 0.05% to 7,747.49. 

The yield on 10-year German Bunds inched up to 2.31%, French bonds traded slightly higher to 2.89%, the UK gilts inched lower to 3.79% and Italian bonds increased to 4.18%.

The euro edged lower to $1.082, the British pound to $1.244 and the Swiss franc to 89.91 cents.

Brent crude increased 20 cents to $75.12 a barrel and the Dutch TTF natural gas increased €0.73 to €32.55 per MWh.

 

Europe Stock Movers 

AstraZeneca increased 0.6% to 12,146.0 pence after the drug maker reported positive results in the discovery of a lung cancer trial. 

SAP SE advanced 1.6% to €123.28 after the German software company announced a stock repurchase program of up to €5 billion.  

Commerzbank AG declined 6.6% to €9.23 despite the German lender saying net income in the first quarter nearly doubled. 

London Stock Exchange Group Plc dropped 3.5% to 8,172.0 pence after a consortium of investors sold stocks in the exchange operator worth about £2.7 billion.  

British Land Company PLC decreased 5.2% to 358.30 pence after the company reported a pre-tax loss in the fiscal year 2023 ending in March. 

JD Sports Fashion Plc declined 5.8% to 160.45 pence after the specialty retailer said pre-tax income declined the fiscal year 2023. 

Siemens AG increased 2.5% to €153.42 after the Germany based industrial engineering company lifted its annual sales outlook on stronger order inflow and higher-than-expected profit in the fiscal second quarter. 

 

Global Markets May Be Too Optimistic About U.S. Debt Ceiling Talks

Barry Adams
16 May, 2023
New York City

Investors remained hopeful that Washington lawmakers will avert a government shutdown, but ground realities are sending different signals. 

With President Biden's international travel commitments over the next few weeks. an agreement has to be in place this week because it still needs approvals from both chambers of the U.S. Congress before the first week of June.  

President Joe Biden is scheduled to travel to Japan for a G7 meeting followed by a trip to Papua New Guinea and then to attend a meeting of Quad nations, Japan, India, Australia and the United States. 

Moreover, the agreement has to be codified in a bill and needs approvals from both chambers of Congress and signed by the U.S. President no later than June 7. 

With each passing day without an agreement on debt ceiling, averting the U.S. government shutdown is looking difficult. 

Moreover, raising the debt limit is not going to increase federal government spending but the agreement will only allow the federal government to implement a spending plan that is already authorized by the Congress and president.  

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen reiterated on Monday that the federal government is most likely to run out of cash as early as two weeks and the failure to suspend or lift the debt ceiling is costing the Treasury in higher interest rates. 

The yields on Treasury notes maturing in four weeks has jumped to 5.60%. 

Standard & Poor's lowered the U.S. government debt rating to AA+ from AAA in 2011  after congressional Republicans threatened a government shutdown. 

Last time the U.S. federal government shut down for 35 days between December 22, 2018 and January 25, 2019.   

Investors were also rattled after Home Depot forecasted sales and comparable store sales in 2023 to decline between 2% and 5% from 2022

 

U.S. Retail Sales Advanced Slightly Higher  

Retail and food services sales increased 0.4% in April to $686.1 billion, the U.S. Census Bureau reported Tuesday. Sales increased 1.6% from a year ago. 

Preliminary estimate of retail and food services sales are adjusted for seasonal and calendar variations but not for inflation. 

The consumer price inflation from the previous month was 0.4%, indicating that sales are just keeping up with inflation but real sales are not expanding. 

Retail trade sales were up 0.4% from the previous month, and up 0.5% from a year ago and nonstore retailers were up 8.0% while food  services and drinking places were up 9.4%.  

Sales of motor vehicles and parts dealers increased 0.4% and building materials and garden supplies advanced 0.5% and sporting goods stores decreased 3.3%. 

Sales at gasoline stations declined 0.8% in April, despite the rise in gasoline prices, on top of 14.6% fall in sales in the month a year ago. 

Core retail sales, which excludes automobiles, gasoline and building materials, accelerated to 0.7%, indicating sustained consumer demand. 

 

U.S. Indexes & Yields 

The S&P 500 index decreased 0.34% to 4,118.83 and the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.06% to 12,369.66.

The yield on 2-year Treasury notes increased to 4.03%, 10-year Treasury notes edged up to 3.53% and 30-year Treasury bonds held at 3.87%. 

Crude oil rose $0.55 to $70.55 a barrel and natural gas prices fell 1 cent to $2.36 a thermal unit. 

 

U.S. Stock Movers 

Home Depot Inc decreased 2.2% to $282.54 after the home improvement retailer reported smaller-than-expected revenue. 

Dish Network Corp increased 7.2% to $6.57 after director James DeFranco said in a regulatory filing the purchase of 3 million shares. 

Capital One Financial Corp increased 6.5% to $94.95 after Warren Buffett controlled Berkshire Hathaway acquired a new stake in the company for $950 million. 

Nu Holdings Ltd increased 5.7% to $6.42 after the fintech company reported first-quarter revenue of $1.6 billion and adjusted earnings of $182.4 million. 

 

European Markets Near Flatline, Eurozone GDP Barely Advanced

European markets showed little movement amid a flood of economic data and corporate earnings. 

Investors generally stayed on the sidelines after China reported weaker than expected rebound in retail sales, fixed investments and industrial production in April. 

In the UK jobless rate increased to 3.9% in the first quarter from 3.8% in the last quarter of 2022, the Office for National Statistics reported Tuesday. 

The slight increase in the jobless rate supported the case that the Bank of England may pause rate hike at its next policy meeting on June 22. 

Closer to home, investors digested economic growth data in the eurozone in the first quarter. 

 

Euro Area GDP Barely Increased In Q1

Seasonally adjusted GDP in the first quarter in the Euro Area barely increased 0.1% from the previous quarter and 0.2% in the Eu, according to the flash estimate released by Eurostat Tuesday. 

Compared with the same quarter of the previous year, seasonally adjusted GDP increased 1.3% in the euro  area and 1.2% in the EU in the first quarter, after rising 1.8% in the euro area and 1.7% in the EU in the  fourth quarter of 2022. 

During the first quarter of 2023, GDP in the United States increased 0.3% compared to the previous quarter and increased 1.6% from a year ago. 

Spain led the region with GDP expanding 3.8% from a year ago followed by 2.6% in Ireland, 2.8% in Romania, 2.5% in Portugal, 0.8% in France and -0.1% in Germany. 

 

Employment Expands in Euro Area and EU 

The number of employed persons increased 0.6% in both the euro area and the EU in the first quarter of 2023, compared with the previous quarter. 

In the fourth quarter of 2022, employment had increased 0.3% in both the euro area and the EU.

On an annual basis, employment increased 1.7% in the euro area and 1.6% in the EU in the first quarter, after rising 1.5% in the euro area and 1.3% in the EU in the fourth quarter  of 2022.

 

Europe Indexes & Yields 

The DAX index decreased 0.1% to 15,897.93, the CAC-40 index fell 0.1% or to 7,406.01 and the FTSE 100 index fell 0.4% to 7,751.08. 

The yield on 10-year German Bunds inched down to 2.26%, French bonds traded slightly lower to 2.89%, the UK gilts inched lower to 3.74% and Italian bonds decreased to 4.14%.

The euro edged higher to $1.089, the British pound to $1.253 and the Swiss franc to 89.29 cents.

Brent crude decreased 36 cents to $74.86 a barrel and the Dutch TTF natural gas decreased €0.49 to €31.82 per MWh.

 

Europe Stock Movers 

Vodafone Group dropped 5% to 85.02 pence after the company said it plans to cut as many as 11,000 jobs in the next three years. 

The newly appointed chief executive Margherita Della Valle also said free cash flow in 2023 is likely to decline by €1.5 billion. 

Embracer Group plunged 16% to SEK 44.40 after the game developer reiterated its annual earnings outlook. 

Britvic Plc increased 1.2% to  939.28 pence after the beverage maker reported an increase in first-half pre-tax profit driven by higher sales. 

Imperial Brands plc declined 0.6% to  1,862.72 pence after the cigarette maker reiterated its full-year outlook. 

Bouygues SA decreased 2.5% to 30.92 after the French construction to telecom group reported a slight increase in first quarter net loss. 

Movers: Capital One, Dish Network, Home Depot, Nu Holdings

Scott Peters
16 May, 2023
New York City

Stocks traded sideways and lacked momentum after retail sales highlighted stretched consumer budgets and sales at gasoline stations declined despite the rise in gasoline prices. 

The S&P 500 index decreased 0.34% to 4,122.34 and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.06% to 12,358.06.

Home Depot Inc decreased 2.2% to $282.54 after the home improvement retailer said fiscal year revenue is expected to decline. 

The home improvement chain blamed the sale decline on softening of lumber prices and poor weather conditions in several parts of the U.S. 

Home Depot forecasted same store and comparable sales in 2023 to decrease  between 2% and 5%. 

Sales in the first quarter decreased 4.2% to $37.3 billion and comparable sales declined 4.5% and in the U.S. store fell 4.6%, operating margin rate between 14.0% and 14.3% and diluted earnings per share to fall between 7.0% and 13.0% a year ago. 

Dish Network Corp increased 7.2% to $6.57 after director James DeFranco said in a regulatory filing the purchase of 3 million shares. 

Capital One Financial Corp increased 6.5% to $94.95 after Warren Buffett controlled Berkshire Hathaway acquired a new stake in the company for $950 million. 

Nu Holdings Ltd increased 5.7% to $6.42 after the fintech company reported first-quarter revenue of $1.6 billion and adjusted earnings of $182.4 million. 

Brazil-based online bank said revenue in the first quarter increased 85% to $1.6 billion from $877.2 million and the company swung to a net income of $141.8 million from a loss of $45.1 million a year ago. 

The company added 4.5 million customers on its digital platform in the quarter and reached a total of 79.1 million. In Brazil, the company added 1.5 million net new customers on its digital platform. 

Deposits in the quarter increased 34% on currency neutral basis to $15.8 billion and total loans surged 54% to $12.8 billion. 

Net interest margin increased 2.2 percentage points and 7.2 percentage points from the previous year to a record high of 15.7%. 

Nu's customers in Brazil now account for 46% of the country’s adult population, versus 44%  in the previous quarter and in Mexico increased 52% to 3.2 million and in Colombia soared 200% to 635,000. 

Stocks In Holding Pattern, Treasury Debt Cost Rises as Debt Ceiling Standoff Continues

Barry Adams
16 May, 2023
New York City

Stocks lacked direction as investors awaited an update on debt ceiling talks and consumer health worries resurfaced after retail sales barely kept up with inflation. 

President Joe Biden and congressional leaders are scheduled to meet today and investors are hoping that two sides could find a compromise and avert the federal government shutdown. 

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen reiterated on Monday that the federal government is most likely to run out of cash as early as two weeks and the failure to suspend or lift the debt ceiling is costing the Treasury in higher interest rates. 

The yields on Treasury notes maturing in four weeks has jumped to 5.60%. 

Investors were also rattled after Home Depot forecasted sales and comparable store sales in 2023 to decline between 2% and 5% from 2022

 

Retail Sales Just Keep Up with Inflation 

Retail and food services sales increased 0.4% in April to $686.1 billion, the U.S. Census Bureau reported Tuesday. Sales increased 1.6% from a year ago. 

Preliminary estimate of retail and food services sales are adjusted for seasonal and calendar variations but not for inflation. 

The consumer price inflation from the previous month was 0.4%, indicating that sales are just keeping up with inflation but real sales are not expanding. 

Retail trade sales were up 0.4% from the previous month, and up 0.5% from a year ago and nonstore retailers were up 8.0% while food  services and drinking places were up 9.4%.  

Sales of motor vehicles and parts dealers increased 0.4% and building materials and garden supplies advanced 0.5% and sporting goods stores decreased 3.3%. 

Sales at gasoline stations declined 0.8% in April, despite the rise in gasoline prices, on top of 14.6% fall in sales in the month a year ago. 

Core retail sales, which excludes automobiles, gasoline and building materials, accelerated to 0.7%, indicating sustained consumer demand. 

 

U.S. Indexes & Yields 

The S&P 500 index decreased 0.34% to 4,122.34 and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.06% to 12,358.06.

The yield on 2-year Treasury notes increased to 4.03%, 10-year Treasury notes edged up to 3.53% and 30-year Treasury bonds held at 3.87%. 

Crude oil rose $0.21 to $71.27 a barrel and natural gas prices rose 3 cents to $2.41 a thermal unit. 

 

U.S. Stock Movers 

Home Depot Inc decreased 2.2% to $282.54 after the home improvement retailer reported smaller-than-expected revenue. 

Dish Network Corp increased 7.2% to $6.57 after director James DeFranco said in a regulatory filing the purchase of 3 million shares. 

Capital One Financial Corp increased 6.5% to $94.95 after Warren Buffett controlled Berkshire Hathaway acquired a new stake in the company for $950 million. 

Nu Holdings Ltd increased 5.7% to $6.42 after the fintech company reported first-quarter revenue of $1.6 billion and adjusted earnings of $182.4 million. 

 

Movers: Britvic, Bouygues, Embracer Group, Imperial Brands, Vodafone

Bridgette Randall
16 May, 2023
Frankfurt

Vodafone Group dropped 5% to 85.02 pence after the company said it plans to cut as many as 11,000 jobs in the next three years. 

The newly appointed chief executive Margherita Della Valle also said free cash flow in 2023 is likely to decline by €1.5 billion. 

Revenue in the fiscal 2023 ending in March increased 0.3% to €45.7 billion from €45.6 billion and net income increased to €12.3 billion from €2.7 billion and basic earnings per share rose to 42.77 cents from 7.71 cents a year ago. 

The reported earnings sharply rose reflecting the sale of Vantage Towers unit, adjusted earnings declined 1.3% to €14.7 billion on higher energy cost and weak market conditions in Germany. 

The company declared a final dividend of 4.5 cents totaling 9.0 cents for fiscal year 2023. 

Embracer Group plunged 16% to SEK 44.40 after the game developer reiterated its estimate for the full-year adjusted EBIT. 

The company said net sales in the fiscal third quarter ending in December soared 128% to SEK 11,6 billion and basic earnings per share was SEK 1.38 compared to a loss of SEK 1.38 a year ago. 

The company reiterates its previously published forecast for adjusted EBIT of SEK 8.0 to 10.0 billion in the financial year 2023 and SEK 10.30 to 13.60 billion in the financial year 2024. 

Britvic Plc increased 1.2% to  939.28 pence after the beverage maker reported an increase in first-half pre-tax profit driven by higher sales. 

Revenue in the first-half ending in March increased 7.9% to £794.0 million and after-tax profit soared 21.4% to £54.4 million. 

Basic earnings per share increased 22.5% to 21.0 pence from 17.2 pence a year ago. 

The company announced an additional stock repurchase program of £75 million over the next twelve months. 

Imperial Brands plc declined 0.6% to  1,862.72 pence after the cigarette maker reiterated its full-year outlook. 

Revenue in the first-half increased 0.3% to £15.4 billion from £15.3 billion and operating profit increased 27.7% to £1.5 billion from £1.2 billion and earnings per share rose 11.2% to 117 pence from 105.2 pence a year ago. 

The company increased its interim dividend to 43.18 pence from 42.54 pence a year ago. 

Bouygues SA decreased 2.5% to 30.92 after the French construction to telecom group reported a slight increase in first quarter net loss. 

European Indexes Hold Amid Data Deluge, Eurozone GDP Barely Expanded

Bridgette Randall
16 May, 2023
Frankfurt

European markets showed little movement amid a flood of economic data and corporate earnings. 

Investors generally stayed on the sidelines after China reported weaker than expected rebound in retail sales, fixed investments and industrial production in April. 

In the UK jobless rate increased to 3.9% in the first quarter from 3.8% in the last quarter of 2022, the Office for National Statistics reported Tuesday. 

The slight increase in the jobless rate supported the case that the Bank of England may pause rate hike at its next policy meeting on June 22. 

Closer to home, investors digested economic growth data in the eurozone in the first quarter. 

 

Euro Area GDP Barely Increased In Q1

Seasonally adjusted GDP in the first quarter in the Euro Area barely increased 0.1% from the previous quarter and 0.2% in the Eu, according to the flash estimate released by Eurostat Tuesday. 

Compared with the same quarter of the previous year, seasonally adjusted GDP increased 1.3% in the euro  area and 1.2% in the EU in the first quarter, after rising 1.8% in the euro area and 1.7% in the EU in the  fourth quarter of 2022. 

During the first quarter of 2023, GDP in the United States increased 0.3% compared to the previous quarter and increased 1.6% from a year ago. 

Spain led the region with GDP expanding 3.8% from a year ago followed by 2.6% in Ireland, 2.8% in Romania, 2.5% in Portugal, 0.8% in France and -0.1% in Germany. 

 

Employment Expands in Euro Area and EU 

The number of employed persons increased 0.6% in both the euro area and the EU in the first quarter of 2023, compared with the previous quarter. 

In the fourth quarter of 2022, employment had increased 0.3% in both the euro area and the EU.

On an annual basis, employment increased 1.7% in the euro area and 1.6% in the EU in the first quarter, after rising 1.5% in the euro area and 1.3% in the EU in the fourth quarter  of 2022.

 

Europe Indexes & Yields 

The DAX index increased 0.1% or 20.14 points to 15,937.81, the CAC-40 index rose 0.02% or 1.62 points to 7,419.83 and the FTSE 100 index advanced 0.08or 6.12 to 7,783.96. 

The yield on 10-year German Bunds inched down to 2.26%, French bonds traded slightly lower to 2.89%, the UK gilts inched lower to 3.74% and Italian bonds decreased to 4.14%.

The euro edged higher to $1.089, the British pound to $1.253 and the Swiss franc to 89.29 cents.

Brent crude decreased 7 cents to $75.15 a barrel and the Dutch TTF natural gas increased €0.05 to €32.36 per MWh.

 

Europe Stock Movers 

Vodafone Group dropped 5% to 85.02 pence after the company said it plans to cut as many as 11,000 jobs in the next three years. 

The newly appointed chief executive Margherita Della Valle also said free cash flow in 2023 is likely to decline by €1.5 billion. 

Embracer Group plunged 16% to SEK 44.40 after the game developer reiterated its annual earnings outlook. 

Britvic Plc increased 1.2% to  939.28 pence after the beverage maker reported an increase in first-half pre-tax profit driven by higher sales. 

Imperial Brands plc declined 0.6% to  1,862.72 pence after the cigarette maker reiterated its full-year outlook. 

Bouygues SA decreased 2.5% to 30.92 after the French construction to telecom group reported a slight increase in first quarter net loss. 

Debt Ceiling Uncertainties Keep U.S. Stock Averages On Tight Leash

Barry Adams
15 May, 2023
New York City

Beyond rhetoric, there was little to drive stocks on Wall Street as lawmakers of both parties jockeyed to get upper hand in media attention. 

Stocks on Wall Street lacked direction as investors awaited a resolution to debt ceiling negotiations as neither party is conceding its position to move discussion forward. 

With each passing day, investors are worried that a last minute deal may be more elusive than previously expected and avert the Federal government shutdown as early as two weeks from today. 

Benchmark indexes traded sideways after two down weeks in a row after the ongoing rate path and inflation worries were replaced by the debt ceiling uncertainties and regional bank fallout. 

President Joe Biden is expected to meet top Congressional leaders on Tuesday but both parties are sending mixed signals and lowering expectations of an agreement. 

The Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in an interview with the Wall Street Journal on Saturday offered hope. 

"I'm told they have found some areas of agreement," Yellen said while attending a meeting of G7 finance ministers in Japan.  

Despite the positive tone, two sides remain apart in how to limit federal government spending and the debt limit increase and duration. 

The Treasury Secretary had said earlier that the U.S. government is expected to run out of cash as early as June 1 if the debt ceiling of $31.4 trillion is not lifted. 

 

U.S. Indexes & Yields 

The S&P 500 index increased 9.87 points to 4,133.44 and the Nasdaq Composite increased 72.07 points to 12,352.86.

The yield on 2-year Treasury notes increased to 4.00%, 10-year Treasury notes edged up to 3.50% and 30-year Treasury bonds held at 3.80%. 

Crude oil rose $0.98 to $71.05 a barrel and natural gas prices rose 10 cents to $2.46 a thermal unit. 

 

U.S. Stock Movers 

Newmont Corporation increased 1.4% to $46.60 after the company and Australia-based Newcrest Mining Ltd reached a binding agreement to proceed with the proposal to acquire 100% of Newcrest. 

Newmont agreed to pay 0.4 of Newmont share for each Newcrest share held and shareholders will be entitled to receive a special dividend of up to US$1.0 a share just ahead of the completion of the deal. 

After considering the full amount of the special dividend, the deal value Newcrest Mining at A$29.27 a share an implied equity value of A$26.2 billion and enterprise value for Newcrest of A$28.8 billion

Newcrest shareholders will own 31% of the combined group and value the company at a 30.4% premium to Newcrest’s closing price of A$22.45 per share on February 3, before the first announcement of the deal.  

Microsoft Corp increased 0.1% to $309.40 after the European Union's regulatory arm approved the purchase of Activision Blizzard for $69 billion.  

Activision Blizzard Inc increased 1.1% to $78.27.  

 

European Markets Advanced On Growth Outlook Revision 

European markets advanced after the European Commission revised higher its economic growth outlook for 2023. 

Benchmark indexes traded higher in France and Germany traded higher after the EC lifted its annual economic growth estimate for the European Union to 1.0% from the previous estimate of 0.8% and for the Euro Area to 1.1% from 0.9% respectively. 

Investors overlooked the sharp decline in industrial production in the region in March and the decline in wholesale prices in April. 

 

Euro Area industrial Output Dropped In March 

Seasonally adjusted industrial production in the Euro Area declined 4.1% in March from the previous month, Eurostat reported Monday. 

On a monthly basis, in the Euro Area, production of capital goods fell 15.4%, intermediate goods 1.8%, energy 0.9% and non-durable consumer goods 0.8%, while production of  durable consumer goods rose 2.8%.

On an annual basis in the Euro Area, production of energy fell 6.1%, intermediate goods 4.7%, capital goods 2.1% and durable consumer goods 0.8%, while production of non-durable consumer goods rose 6.8%. 

Industrial output dropped the most since 2020, driven by a significant decline in production of capital goods. 

 

Germany's Wholesale Prices Declined In April

Germany wholesale prices declined 0.5% in April from a year ago, the first fall since December 2020, the Federal Statistics Office reported Monday. 

On an annual basis, the wholesale price index in March increased 2.0% and in February jumped 8.9%.

The annual price decline was mainly driven by the price decrease of mineral oil products by 15.7%, scrap and residual materials 31.5 %, cereals, raw tobacco, seeds and feedstuff 25.2%, ores, metals and semi-finished metal products 20.5% and chemical products 5.4%. 

However, the selling prices in wholesale trade for fruit, vegetables and potatoes  surged 22.0%, building materials and elements 13.9% and living animals 11.4%. 

The wholesale price index declined 0.4% in April from the previous month reversing the 0.2% increase in March. 

 

Europe Indexes & Yields 

The DAX index increased 0.2% or 35.26 points to 15,949.29, the CAC-40 index rose 0.4% or 29.78 points to 7,443.59 and the FTSE 100 index advanced 0.5% or 35.67 to 7,790.29. 

The yield on 10-year German Bunds inched down to 2.29%, French bonds traded slightly lower to 2.88%, the UK gilts inched lower to 3.78% and Italian bonds decreased to 4.18%.

The euro edged higher to $1.087, the British pound to $1.250 and the Swiss franc to 89.60 cents.

Brent crude increased 20 cents to $74.27 a barrel and the Dutch TTF natural gas increased €0.27 to €32.50 per MWh.

 

Europe Stock Movers 

Siemens Energy increased 3.3% to €23.01 after the maker of capital equipment for the power sector revised higher its 2023 outlook.  

Diploma plc increased 2.4% 2,920 pence after the UK-based company reported higher-than-expected pre-tax profit and revenue growth in the first-half. 

British American Tobacco increased 0.3% to 2,717.0 pence after the company appointed finance director Tadeu Marroco as its chief executive officer. 

AXA SA gained 0.3% to € 27.56 after the French insurer reported an increase in gross premium in the first quarter.