Euro stocks erase losses as Draghi talks up recovery

European Central Bank president says the cyclical recovery may be gaining momentum

Traders  on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. US stocks were little changed on Thursday as gains in bank stocks were countered by the second day of losses in energy shares. Photograph: Brendan McDermid/Reuters
Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. US stocks were little changed on Thursday as gains in bank stocks were countered by the second day of losses in energy shares. Photograph: Brendan McDermid/Reuters

European stocks closed little changed, erasing an earlier drop after European Central Bank president Mario Draghi said downside risks to the euro-area economy were less pronounced. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index added less than 0.1 per cent at the close.

Banks rallied, leading gains among industry groups, after Mr Draghi acknowledged that the cyclical recovery may be gaining momentum, saying there is no longer a "sense of urgency" prompted by deflation risks.

The euro gained against the dollar as a result, rising above the $1.06 level during Mr Draghi’s remarks, reversing earlier selling that had brought it to a six-day low.

DUBLIN

The Iseq rose 22 points to 6,658 in tandem with other European bourses. Neither of the two Iseq-listed banks benefited much from the rally in financials across Europe. Bank of Ireland rose by a meagre 1.3 per cent to 23.5 cents while rival Permanent TSB fell nearly 3 per cent to €2.65.

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Providence Resources continued its good run to hit 20 cents. The explorer this week announced it had agreed a farm-in deal with a unit of Cairn Energy for one of its southwest prospects.

Ryanair rose nearly 3 per cent to close at €14.45 as oil slid below $49 a barrel for the first time this year.

Paddy Power BetFair climbed 2.4 per cent to €99.22 while Kerry foods fell marginally to €74.12.

Packaging group Smurfit Kappa, meanwhile, fell 1.3 per cent to €25.19 in line with the slump in commodities.

LONDON

Investors checked out of Morrisons on Thursday after the supermarket giant sounded a note of caution over the cost impact from the Brexit-hit pound. The FTSE 100 Index was down 19.65 points to 7,314.96, with the Big Four grocer weighing on the London market after warning of the "impact on imported food prices if sterling stays at lower levels".

Shares in the grocer closed 6 per cent lower, or 16.2p, to 230.8p, despite the firm revealing a 49.8 per cent rise in pre-tax profits to £325 million.

Insurers Aviva and Admiral were among the biggest risers despite a strong contrast in their full-year results. Shares in Aviva rose 6 per cent, or 33p, to 544p, after pledging to hand more cash to shareholders and announcing a hefty jump in profits.

Investors were also upbeat about Admiral despite the car insurer warning over price hikes as annual profits tumbled by a quarter. The Cardiff-based group said it had already taken "pre-emptive" action to increase prices last December with "more to follow" as it looks to recoup a £150 million hit following a government cut to the so-called Ogden discount rate calculation.

EUROPE

Stoxx 600 lenders closed at the highest level in three weeks, offsetting losses in miners, the worst performers in the regional benchmark.

Among shares active on corporate news, Akzo Nobel jumped 13 per cent after the coatings company rejected an unsolicited €20.9 billion takeover bid from PPG Industries and said it may separate its specialty-chemicals business to boost the stock price.

French publisher Lagardere was the second-best performer, up 10.3 per cent, chalking up its best daily gains in more than eight years, after a top-ranked Barclays analyst raised his rating on the stock, citing cash flow achievement.

The heaviest Stoxx faller was Domino's Pizza, down 13.2 per cent after disappointing results.

NEW YORK

US stocks were little changed on Thursday as gains in bank stocks were countered by the second day of losses in energy shares, a day before the crucial monthly jobs report that would bolster already sky-high odds of a rate hike next week.

Fuelling the rise in bank stocks was a report that showed the number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits rose to 243,000 last week, but remained below 300,000 for the 105th week.

Johnson & Johnson was the top boost to the broader US index and the Dow, up 1.2 per cent after Jefferies raised its price target on the healthcare conglomerate's stock.

Apple was the top drag on the S&P and the Nasdaq, slipping 0.4 per cent on chatter that iPhone 8 launch could be delayed.

Signet Jewelers was the biggest percentage gainer on the S&P, with a near 8 per cent rise after the company reported a quarterly profit above analysts' expectations.

– (Additional reporting by Bloomberg/Reuters)

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy is Economics Correspondent of The Irish Times