Market Updates

Europe Surges on Energy Stocks

Ivaylo
15 Jan, 2007
New York City

    European shares advanced in early trading on Monday, supported by strength in the commodity sector and by gains from Smiths Group after that company agreed to sell its aerospace operations to General Electric for $4.8 billion. The commodity sector gains came as some investors look to go back into the sector after recent oil price weakness. In early trade, FTSE 100 in London added 0.5%, Xetra Dax in Frankfurt gained 0.5% and the CAC 40 in Paris rose 0.4%.

[R]6:30AM European stocks gain Monday on resource stocks, oil and paper groups.[/R]
European markets advanced on Monday. In early trade, FTSE 100 in London added 0.5% to 6,269.5, Xetra Dax in Frankfurt gained 0.5% to 6,738.74 and the CAC 40 in Paris rose 0.4% to 5,641.95.

Advancers

Smiths Group rallied 14.4% as it agreed to sell its aerospace business to General Electric and also said that it would return 2.1 billion pounds to its shareholders. Oil firms BP and Total rose more than 1% each, while miner Vedanta Resources gained 3.3%. Vedanta also posted higher third-quarter profits.

Energy-related stocks bounced back as oil prices surged back above $53 a barrel on the prospect of production cuts from the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries. Prospective merger partners Statoil and Norsk Hydro led the advancers in the sector. Statoil gained 2.4%, while Norsk added 1.8%. Finnish refiner Neste Oil gained 2.6%, French group Total added 1.1% and Repsol of Spain moved 1% higher.

Papermakers and logging companies also gained helped by, the strong performance of the top two logging groups in Finland. UPM-Kymmene rose 2.6% and Stora Enso added 2.2%. SCA of Sweden climbed 2.7%.

Decliners

Power station builder Alstom of France declined 2.4% after Dresdner Kleinwort cut its rating from buy to add despite the recent strong showing of the stock.

Oil and gold

Oil prices advanced above $53 a barrel Monday on reports that OPEC may hold an emergency meeting to try to reverse the 13% drop in oil prices this year. Crude oil for February delivery gained 26 cents to $53.25 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude contract for February delivery gained 44 cents to $53.39 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London. Gold opened Monday at a bid price of $625.50 a troy ounce, up from $617.72 late Friday.

Currencies

The euro continued to rise against the U.S. dollar Monday as traders awaited a number of economic reports from the U.S. later this week. The euro bought $1.2938, up from $1.2915 on Friday. The British pound advanced to $1.9647 from $1.9581 on Friday, driven by the possibility that the decision by the Bank of England last week to hike its key interest to 5.25%, could signal more increases. The dollar bought 120.56 Japanese yen, up from 120.35 yen late Friday.

[R]5:00AM Copper futures declined on profit-taking Friday, gold advances.[/R]
The most-active March copper contract lost 5.60 cents to end at $2.6030 per pound on the New York Mercantile Exchange. February gold settled up $13 at $626.90 a troy ounce, while March silver gained 42 cents to close at $12.88. April platinum added $7.30 to $1,152.10 an ounce and March palladium settled up $2.10 at $334.95 an ounce.

The February crude oil contract rose $1.11 to finish at $52.99 a barrel. February heating oil moved 2.32 cents higher to end at $1.5036 a gallon. February gasoline gained 4.15 cents to close at $1.4320 a gallon and February natural gas also ended up 30.9 cents at $6.601 per million British thermal units.

On the New York Board of Trade, March Arabica coffee futures lost 0.35 cent to settle at $1.2030 a pound, with May off 0.30 cent at $1.2345. Futures on raw sugar in foreign ports for March declined 0.09 cent to close at 10.93 cents a pound.

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