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ECB stimulus draws tepid response from European stocks; banks end flat

Published 09/12/2019, 12:37 PM
Updated 09/12/2019, 12:37 PM
© Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph at the stock exchange in Frankfurt

By Sruthi Shankar and Agamoni Ghosh

(Reuters) - European stocks edged higher in choppy trading on Thursday, with banks underwhelmed by the European Central Bank's stimulus measures while Washington's move to delay tariffs on Chinese goods boosted automakers and technology firms.

The pan-European stocks index (STOXX) gained as much as 0.8% after the ECB cut its deposit rate to a record low of -0.5% from -0.4% and said it will restart bond purchases of 20 billion euros a month from November.

That initially sent bond yields tumbling, the euro down and euro zone stocks (STOXXE) into positive territory.

Gains in the STOXXE index wore off as the session progressed, however, with euro zone banks (SX7E) swinging on the news that the ECB was easing the terms of its cheap loan scheme to banks and introducing a tiered deposit rate.

"I don't think this is a game changer," said Pictet Asset Management's chief strategist Luca Paolini.

"Even if it was a positive surprise in some areas, there were negative surprises overall. They basically did what the market expected and they've done it many times in the past."

Euro zone banks - one of the main beneficiaries of an investor pivot into value stocks in recent days - closed 0.24% higher, while broader European banks (SX7P) finished unchanged.

Italian banks (FTIT8300), which have big holdings of sovereign bonds, were an outperformer with a 1.2% gain, owing to a recent surge in Italian government bond prices.

Trade headlines also swayed markets, with automakers (SXAP) jumping on a report that the Trump administration was considering an interim deal with China, although CNBC said that a senior White House official denied the report.

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Offering relief to battered financial markets, President Donald Trump said the United States would delay increasing tariffs on $250 billion worth of Chinese imports by two weeks as "a gesture of good will".

Optimism about a de-escalation in the economically damaging China-U.S. trade war and expectations of monetary stimulus from the ECB have led major European indices to track higher this week.

Energy stocks (SXEP) were a big drag, falling 1.3%, as oil prices fell on oversupply concerns. [O/R]

Among individual stocks, Anheuser-Busch InBev (BR:ABI) was the biggest boost to the STOXX 600 after the company said it would again explore an initial public offering in Hong Kong for its Asia Pacific unit two months after cancelling the planned listing.

Conversely, transportation firm Alstom (PA:ALSO) fell 4.9% after French conglomerate Bouygues (PA:BOUY) halved its stake in the company.

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