European stocks advanced for a second day, trimming the biggest weekly decline in two months, as euro-area consumer confidence and U.K. economic growth exceeded forecasts.
Euro-area consumer sentiment rose to the highest level in two years in August, European Commission data showed today. The index of household confidence increased to minus 15.6 from minus 17.4 in July. The median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg had called for minus 16.5.
U.K. gross domestic product increased 0.7 percent in the second quarter from the previous period, when it rose 0.3 percent, the Office for National Statistics said in London. That compared with an initial estimate of 0.6 percent.
ECB Governing Council Member Ewald Nowotny said late yesterday that good economic reports from the euro zone mean the central bank has no reason to lower interest rates further from their record low of 0.5 percent.
Releases this month have shown German manufacturing expanded at a faster-than-expected pace in July, while the gross domestic product of the 17 countries in the euro area increased in the three months through June, following six quarters of contraction.
National benchmark indexes advanced in 15 of the 18 western European markets today. The U.K.’s FTSE 100 climbed 0.7 percent, Germany’s DAX increased 0.2 percent and France’s CAC 40 added 0.3 percent.
A gauge of mining companies was among the best performers in the 19 industry groups in the Stoxx 600. Glencore rose 1 percent to 317 pence and Rio Tinto, the world’s second-biggest mining company, added 0.8 percent to 3,069 pence. Anglo American Plc advanced 1.3 percent to 1,524.5 pence.
FLSmidth surged 9.8 percent to 320.80 kroner, the biggest jump since November 2010. The company said it will cut 1,100 jobs and close down more than 20 global locations in an effort to reduce costs, after second-quarter earnings trailed analysts’ projections.
“The cost-cutting programme is more aggressive than we expected,” Nordea Bank AB analyst Patrik Setterberg wrote in a report.
Croda climbed 4.3 percent to 2,677 pence after Deutsche Bank raised its recommendation on the world’s second-biggest maker of cosmetic ingredients to buy from hold, saying it expects sales growth to improve in the second half of the year and 2014.
ING Groep NV rose 2.4 percent to 8.78 euros after Morgan Stanley raised its rating on the shares to overweight, similar to buy, from equal weight, saying the Dutch lender’s net-interest margin is likely to increase.
Bachem Holding AG rallied 3.4 percent to 46.95 Swiss francs after the maker of pharmaceutical ingredients reported first-half net income of 10.4 million francs ($11.3 million), from 7.3 million francs a year earlier.
Yara International ASA, the largest publicly traded maker of nitrogen fertilizer, slipped 2.8 percent to 250.60 kroner. Deutsche Bank AG cut its rating on the shares to sell from hold, saying it expects supply and demand in the global urea market to weaken in the second half of the year and beyond.
U.S. Stock futures were little changed as investors awaited a report on sales of new houses.
Global Stocks:
Nikkei 13,660.55 +295.38 +2.21%
Hang Seng 21,863.51 -31.89 -0.15%
Shanghai Composite 2,057.46 -9.67 -0.47%
FTSE 6,482.94 +36.07 +0.56%
CAC 4,057.8 -1.32 -0.03%
DAX 8,411.95 +14.06 +0.17%
Crude oil $104.93 -0.10%
Gold $1371.00 +0.01%
Upgrades:
Downgrades:
Other:
CRT Capital raises their Boeing (BA) target to $123 from $105
Asian stocks rose, paring the benchmark equity gauge’s biggest weekly decline in two months, after reports from Europe to the U.S. boosted confidence in the economic recovery and the yen weakened against the dollar.
Nikkei 225 13,660.55 +295.38 +2.21%
Hang Seng 21,863.51 -31.89 -0.15%
S&P/ASX 200 5,123.36 +47.61 +0.94%
Shanghai Composite 2,057.46 -9.67 -0.47%
Asia’s largest carmaker Toyota Motor Corp. , which gets about 75 percent of its sales outside Japan, climbed 2.8 percent as the yen touched the lowest level in nearly three weeks against the dollar.
Henderson Land Development Co. advanced 2.6 percent in Hong Kong after the homebuilder controlled by billionaire Lee Shau-kee posted higher sales.
Amada Co., a Japanese maker of metal-cutting machines, jumped 5.3 percent after a report operating profits will surge 150 percent.
Nikkei 225 -0,44 -59,16 13,365.17%
Hang Seng 21,875.65 57,92 0,27%
S & P / ASX 200 5,075.75 -24.24 -0.48%
Shanghai Composite -5,84 -0,28 2,067.12%
FTSE 100 6,446.87 +56.03 +0.88%
CAC 40 4,059.12 +44.03 +1.10%
DAX 8,397.89 +112.48 +1.36%
DJIA 14,963.70 66.19 0.44%
S&P 500 1,656.96 14.16 0.86%
NASDAQ 3,638.71 38.92 1.08%