Market Updates
Europe Lower on Banks, Miners
Ivaylo
02 Nov, 2006
New York City
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European shares fell on Thursday, hurt by concerns over a flagging U.S. economy after recent downbeat data and by a mixed set of third-quarter numbers from some of biggest companies in Europe, including Unilever and BASF. Mining and financial stocks also weighed down on the market. Miners dropped on the demand implications behind slowing growth in the US. By mid morning, the FTSE 100 in London shed 0.25, Frankfurt Xetra Dax fell 0.23%, and the CAC 40 in Paris lost 0.7%.
[R]6:30AM Europe falls on banks, miners, downbeat US economic data.[/R]
European markets were lower by mid morning on Thursday. The FTSE 100 in London shed 0.25 to 6,138.9, Frankfurt Xetra Dax fell 0.23% to 6,276.35, and the CAC 40 in Paris lost 0.7% to 5,334.53.
Advancers
Bucking the weaker banking sector, Credit Suisse, the investment bank, gained 3.1% after the third-quarter net profits came in well ahead of expectations as strong trading income helped it on the way to a year of expected record earnings.
Altana, the German drugs and chemicals manufacturer, gained 3.2% after reporting a 19% rise in nine-month core earnings, beating expectations, thanks to a strong performance at its chemicals division.
Unilever, the Anglo-Dutch consumer goods group, announced a 4.8% rise in third-quarter core sales at the top end of expectations. This outshone a disappointing fall in margins as the company spent heavily on branding and advertising to aid its recovery. The Amsterdam-listed shares gained 3.2%.
Decliners
Miners fell on the demand implications behind slowing growth in the US. Rio Tinto was off 1.4%, while Antofagasta slipped 1.5%.
The performance contrasted with that of domestic rival UBS, which on Tuesday reported a 21% fall in third-quarter profits, missing expectations. UBS shares fell 0.3%, while those of Deutsche Bank, which reported lower trading revenues on Wednesday, fell 0.2%.
[ Oil and gold
Oil prices fell slightly Thursday as the market reacted to a weekly U.S. report that showed a climb in crude oil stocks but a larger-than-expected drop in product inventories. Light sweet crude for December delivery fell 11 cents to $58.60 a barrel in electronic trading on the NYME.
Gold opened Thursday at a bid price of $614.90 a troy ounce, down from $615.20 late Wednesday.
Currencies
The euro rose to $1.2758 from $1.2756 yesterday. Against the euro, the British pound was at 66.88 pence from 66.85 pence yesterday. The U.K. currency was also at $1.9082 versus the dollar from $1.9095. The yen climbed to 116.77 against the dollar.
[R]5:00AM Gold rose to 8-week high Wednesday, as the dollar softened.[/R]
December gold ended at $619.30 an ounce, up $12.50, after peaking at $619.70 Wednesday at the NYME. December silver futures moved 20.5 cents higher at $12.475 an ounce. January platinum advanced $14.20 to close at $1,100.70 an ounce. December palladium ended $1.40 up at $324.10 an ounce. December copper contract plunged 10.45 cents to settle at $3.2410 per pound
December crude oil futures declined 2 cents to finish at $58.71 a barrel. December heating oil futures settled down 1.55 cents to $1.6515 a gallon. December gasoline closed 3.57 cents higher at $1.4630 a gallon. December natural gas gained 17.8 cents to end at $7.712 a million British thermal units.
On the New York Board of Trade, December Arabica coffee futures closed 0.40 cent higher at $1.0865 a pound. March futures on raw sugar in foreign ports settled 0.05 cent lower at 11.50 cents a pound.
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