European shares rise after shaking off Italian fears

Tech stocks advance on Wall Street, while dollar leaps to two-week high

Shares in Apple rose, boosting the three main US indexes.  Photograph: Bloomberg
Shares in Apple rose, boosting the three main US indexes. Photograph: Bloomberg

European shares rose slightly on Thursday, reversing initial losses, as anxiety over political stability in Italy appeared to ease just hours before a cabinet meeting to set budget targets.

In the United States, stocks climbed and the dollar jumped to a two-week high, the day after the Federal Reserve cited a strong economy in its decision to raise interest rates.

Dublin

The Iseq index advanced for the second consecutive day, edging up just shy of 0.2 per cent, slightly behind the gains for the major European indices.

There was little stock-related news propelling share price movements, but financial stocks came under some pressure, notably Bank of Ireland, which slipped 1.6 per cent to €6.90.

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Paper and packaging group Smurfit Kappa, which has been weak of late after its write-offs in Venezuela, bounced back 2.6 per cent, closing at €34.24.

Ryanair also shook off negative strike-related sentiment, as well as the higher oil prices that weighed on London-listed EasyJet and IAG. The airline added 0.3 per cent to €13.15, while building materials group CRH closed up 0.35 per cent at €28.40

London

The FTSE 100 index added 0.45 per cent, helped by a drop in sterling and gains for oil and gas companies on the back of high oil prices.

Among the top FTSE gainers were tobacco group BAT, spirits maker Diageo and drugmaker Shire, which all rose more than 1 per cent, while BP was the highest riser in the oil sector, adding 1.2 per cent.

Online financial trading firm IG Group sank 12 per cent after saying its chief executive Peter Hetherington would step down immediately.

Motoring parts and cycling retailer Halfords warned higher investment in stores meant profit would be lower than previously forecast, sending its shares down 8 per cent. The company declined to comment on a Sky News report that it has bid for smaller rival Evans Cycles.

DCC, the Dublin-headquartered sales, marketing and support services group with a listing in London, completed its share placing, raising £600 million to fund further acquisitions. The stock, which ended 4 per cent lower, earlier announced the acquisition of Canadian audio specialist Jam.

Drugmaker Indivior fell another 13 per cent, adding to losses after a 16.5 per cent dive on Wednesday after it slashed a revenue forecast for its opioid addiction drug Sublocade.

Europe

The pan-European Stoxx 600 index rose 0.4 per cent to a one-month high, having earlier lost as much as 0.6 per cent. Italian stocks were running down 2 per cent, but recovered somewhat to close down 0.6 per cent. Italy’s economic ministry was forced to deny that its chief Giovanni Tria, an academic who doesn’t belong to any one party, had threatened to resign.

In Germany, the Dax rose 0.4 per cent, while the French Cac 40 was up 0.5 per cent. Euro-zone banks fell 0.3 per cent.

Danish healthcare company Ambu saw its shares fall 16.7 per cent with traders citing a negative note from Nordea. Chipmaker AMS fell 6.4 per cent after UBS analysts cut their price target on the stock.

In positive moves, the Swedish fashion retailer H&M jumped 11.1 per cent after reassuring investors it would not need to cut costs further to shift unsold clothing.

US

Wall Street advanced in early trading, buoyed by gains for tech stocks.

Apple rose 2.5 per cent, providing the biggest boost to the three main indexes after analysts at JP Morgan started coverage of the stock with an "overweight" rating. Amazon rose 1.9 per cent after brokerage Stifel talked up its businesses, while Facebook gained 2.6 per cent.

Oil edged higher, driven by the prospect of a shortfall in global supply once US sanctions against major crude exporter Iran come into force in just five weeks’ time. – Additional reporting: Reuters.