European shares on Friday notched their best weekly performance in nearly eight months, largely driven by bets of smaller rate hikes by the US Federal Reserve and easing COVID-19 curbs in China.
The STOXX 600 index ended the session up 0.1 percent at a 11-week high of 432.26, posting a weekly gain of 3.66 percent, with financial services, mining and retail stocks leading the gains.
The weekly gains mostly came after data on Thursday showed US consumer prices cooled more than expected in October, leading to expectations that the Fed could temper its size of future interest rate hikes.
“The market’s just waiting for signals that the initial interpretation to the US CPI [consumer price index] numbers yesterday is the correct one,” TS Lombard research head Andrea Cicione said.
In the UK, the export-oriented FTSE 100 on Friday fell 0.78 percent to 7,318.04, hurt by a stronger pound, after data showed a smaller-than-expected contraction in the British economy, although mid-cap stocks marked their best week in almost two years. The index was down 0.23 percent from a week earlier.
China-exposed luxury giants Hermes International SCA, Kering SA and LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE jumped between 2.4 percent and 2.8 percent. Richemont SA, the maker of Cartier necklaces and IWC Schaffhausen timepieces, soared 10.50 percent on better-than-expected sales and margins.
The European basic resources jumped 2.6 percent as prices of base metals rose.
“Markets are welcoming looser COVID rules in China, but infection numbers are elevated and vaccination rates are low, which means that the path to complete removal of restrictions still looks long,” strategists at ING wrote in a note.
An upbeat earnings season and hopes of smaller Fed rate hikes have helped the STOXX 600 stretch gains to a fourth straight week, as investors set aside concerns about the European economy slipping into recession.
However, analysts said this profit growth could dry up within months, as high inflation and recession rattle the economy.
Germany’s inflation continued to rise at an alarming pace, as data showed consumer prices, harmonized to compare with other European countries, last month was 11.6 percent higher year-on-year.
Among stocks, Europe’s largest mobile phone tower operator, Spain’s Cellnex Telecom SA, gained 1.6 percent after posting a 45 percent rise in nine-month core earnings.
Delivery Hero SE jumped 8.8 percent as analysts raised their price targets on the German food delivery company’s shares a day after it forecast positive adjusted core profit margin for next year and reassured investors of reaching profitability.
POWERING UP: PSUs for AI servers made up about 50% of Delta’s total server PSU revenue during the first three quarters of last year, the company said Power supply and electronic components maker Delta Electronics Inc (台達電) reported record-high revenue of NT$161.61 billion (US$5.11 billion) for last quarter and said it remains positive about this quarter. Last quarter’s figure was up 7.6 percent from the previous quarter and 41.51 percent higher than a year earlier, and largely in line with Yuanta Securities Investment Consulting Co’s (元大投顧) forecast of NT$160 billion. Delta’s annual revenue last year rose 31.76 percent year-on-year to NT$554.89 billion, also a record high for the company. Its strong performance reflected continued demand for high-performance power solutions and advanced liquid-cooling products used in artificial intelligence (AI) data centers,
SIZE MATTERS: TSMC started phasing out 8-inch wafer production last year, while Samsung is more aggressively retiring 8-inch capacity, TrendForce said Chipmakers are expected to raise prices of 8-inch wafers by up to 20 percent this year on concern over supply constraints as major contract chipmakers Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) and Samsung Electronics Co gradually retire less advanced wafer capacity, TrendForce Corp (集邦科技) said yesterday. It is the first significant across-the-board price hike since a global semiconductor correction in 2023, the Taipei-based market researcher said in a report. Global 8-inch wafer capacity slid 0.3 percent year-on-year last year, although 8-inch wafer prices still hovered at relatively stable levels throughout the year, TrendForce said. The downward trend is expected to continue this year,
A proposed billionaires’ tax in California has ignited a political uproar in Silicon Valley, with tech titans threatening to leave the state while California Governor Gavin Newsom of the Democratic Party maneuvers to defeat a levy that he fears would lead to an exodus of wealth. A technology mecca, California has more billionaires than any other US state — a few hundred, by some estimates. About half its personal income tax revenue, a financial backbone in the nearly US$350 billion budget, comes from the top 1 percent of earners. A large healthcare union is attempting to place a proposal before
Vincent Wei led fellow Singaporean farmers around an empty Malaysian plot, laying out plans for a greenhouse and rows of leafy vegetables. What he pitched was not just space for crops, but a lifeline for growers struggling to make ends meet in a city-state with high prices and little vacant land. The future agriculture hub is part of a joint special economic zone launched last year by the two neighbors, expected to cost US$123 million and produce 10,000 tonnes of fresh produce annually. It is attracting Singaporean farmers with promises of cheaper land, labor and energy just over the border.