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European stocks fall on raised recession fears; U.K. retail sales disappoint

Published Dec 16, 2022 03:56AM ET
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By Peter Nurse 

Investing.com - European stock markets fell Friday, continuing the previous session’s selloff in the wake of the ECB’s hawkish message, with weak U.K. retail sales data adding to the gloom.

At 04:00 ET (09:00 GMT), the DAX index in Germany traded 0.7% lower, the FTSE 100 in the U.K. dropped 0.5% and CAC 40 in France traded down 0.9%.

Sentiment has been hit by the hawkish message from European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde following the central bank tightening monetary policy by 50 basis points on Thursday.

Lagarde signaled further significant tightening remained ahead in the battle against inflation, saying “interest rates will still have to rise significantly at a steady pace to reach levels that are sufficiently restrictive to ensure a timely return of inflation to the 2% medium-term target.”

This monetary tightening is set to occur even as economic data points to the region teetering on the cusp of recession.

Both German and French economic activity data remained in contraction territory, while U.K. retail sales fell 0.4% on the month in November, a drop of 5.9% on the year, the third drop in four months, as promotions ahead of Black Friday failed to gain much traction with consumers hard-pressed by double-digit inflation.

Adding to the negative sentiment was a fresh wave of Russian missile attacks against Ukraine, hitting the capital Kyiv and escalating geopolitical tensions in the region.

In corporate news, TeamViewer (ETR:TMV) stock rose 3.1% after the German software development firm announced it had reached an agreement with Manchester United (NYSE:MANU) that will allow the high-profile football club to buy back the rights to its lucrative shirt sponsorship. 

Games Workshop (LON:GAW) stock rose 13% after the Warhammer owner said it has signed an agreement in principle with Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) to develop film and television productions based on its figurine-based miniature wargame.

Crude oil prices weakened Friday, continuing the previous session’s losses on concerns surrounding future economic activity.

The ECB was joined by the Bank of England and the Swiss National Bank in hiking interest rates on Thursday, following the lead of the U.S. Federal Reserve, and pointed to more tightening to come. This, coupled with weak economic data, has increased fears of a potential global recession, and thus lower energy consumption.

By 04:00 ET, U.S. crude futures traded 1.5% lower at $74.94 a barrel, while the Brent contract fell 1.3% to $80.12. 

Both benchmarks are on course to post weekly gains of around 5%, their biggest weekly gains since early October, helped by the closure of the Keystone pipeline following a leak and by likely resumption of full Chinese demand in 2023 as COVID curbs are lifted.

Gold futures fell 0.1% to $1,786.25/oz, while EUR/USD traded 0.3% higher at 1.0657.

European stocks fall on raised recession fears; U.K. retail sales disappoint
 

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Comments (9)
Jan Buyle
Jan Buyle Dec 16, 2022 6:43AM ET
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Well, brexit is a big success, isn't it... lol
Lionel Deville
Lionel Deville Dec 16, 2022 6:33AM ET
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Rising rates appear to be a purely automatic and political response to inflation. The reason for inflation is a consequence of social and political situation. Social due to an epidemic, its restrictions followed by overconsumption, Political by the fact of economic-energy sanctions in particular, and the bellicose context in all respects.    If we look at consumption, it exploded after COVID, and closely follows inflation, added to energy shortages and economic restraint of concomitant global sanctions. Consumption returns to a normality (-0.6 is still a little high compared to 2020) oil returns to a normal price... the inflationary descent is economically initiated (Except events and public actions), notwithstanding the mechanical cultural rates (declarations of political-economic of Christmas decorations and guru manipulations).
amt hun
amt hun Dec 16, 2022 6:03AM ET
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Investors being scared out of the market, selling value stocks for peanunts... Pathetic.
Tom Michaels
Tom Michaels Dec 16, 2022 6:03AM ET
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fraud, fraud, fraud
Ahmed Medoo
Ahmed Medoo Dec 16, 2022 5:45AM ET
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unjustified sell off .... manipulation as it is
chulwoo kim
chulwoo kim Dec 16, 2022 5:26AM ET
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powell break market. he is useless.
Ken Roth
Ken Roth Dec 16, 2022 4:55AM ET
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Major exageration and threats by Lagarde to appear tough on inflation, when in fact the european economy is in deep problems and certainly do not need rate hikes, The inflation is already going down with fast pace in Europe but reality is Europe cannot keep raising rates this will worsen everything when all we have to do is to ensure that Russia looses the war and are thrown out of Ukraine.
Tiberius Augustus
Tiberius Augustus Dec 16, 2022 4:55AM ET
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Inflation is at 10.1 % it’s not coming down
Ken Roth
Ken Roth Dec 16, 2022 4:55AM ET
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Tiberius Augustus  not everywhere
Devis Mazza
Gatto Dec 16, 2022 4:40AM ET
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First they create the conditions to raise prices by fueling wars, plandemics and terror....then they say that the markets collapse "with the weak data on retail sales"....mmmmhh I would say that it doesn't take a genius to understand that if you raise energy prices, production costs increase and so do product prices and consequently people who have been kept poor no longer buy..... Hence the confirmation, the facts are 2: 1) or the rulers are not "studied" as they say they are, or 2) they are creating "misery" purposely...."2"
rajesh vairale
rajesh vairale Dec 16, 2022 4:26AM ET
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US market going to RIP very soon.
 
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