Investors get cautious again as European shares rally ends

Bank of Ireland climbs 6.3 per cent to €5.48 while AIB adds 2.07 per cent to close at €3.95

Nivea skin-cream maker Beiersdorf plunged to two-year lows after it issued a shock warning about its 2019 operating margins. Photograph: Fabian Bimmer
Nivea skin-cream maker Beiersdorf plunged to two-year lows after it issued a shock warning about its 2019 operating margins. Photograph: Fabian Bimmer

European shares ended a rally as a warning from Nivea skin-cream maker Beiersdorf took the glow off consumer stocks, prompting an outbreak of caution among investors.

DUBLIN

Permanent TSB failed to impress investors after reporting that profit before tax and once-off charges rose 45 per cent last year to €94 million. Its shares closed 2.54 per cent down at €1.536 and hit a low of €1.52 early in the day, despite the fact that banks were generally in favour on Wednesday.

Bank of Ireland climbed 6.3 per cent to €5.48 while AIB added 2.07 per cent to close at €3.95. Dealers said that signs of some movement in the Brexit impasse aided the Irish lenders, which also benefitted from a generally strong performance in the sector across Europe.

Other stocks with a big exposure to the Republic's economy also rallied on hopes of averting a crisis as the UK prepares to leave the EU next month. Builder Cairn Homes rose 4.44 per cent to €1.316.

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The company’s shareholders this week voted for measures that would ultimately allow it return cash to investors through stock buy backs and other measures.

Rival Glenveagh put in a similar performance, advancing 4.58 per cent to 84.5 cent.

Insurer FBD added 1.58 per cent to €8.98 after announcing that it made €50 million profit before tax last year and delivered a 15 per cent return on equity.

LONDON

Woodies DIY owner Grafton, which is listed on the London market, was 0.6 per cent off at 790 pence sterling as it prepared to report 2018 results on Thursday.

Department store chain Marks & Spencer (M&S) will buy 50 per cent of online player Ocado's UK retail business for up to £750 million in a deal meant to "transform" grocery shopping.

M&S shares sank on the news that the struggling retailer will issue new shares in a bid to raise up to £600 million to finance the deal, as well as slash the dividend by 40per cent. The stock closed down 37.8p, or 12.5 per cent, at 265.4p.

Ocado shares, on the other hand, surged, closing the day 29p higher at 1,019p.

Housebuilder Taylor Wimpey got reported a 5.5 per cent increase in underlying pre-tax profits to £856.8 million for 2018. Its stock rose 3.54 per cent to 177p.

EUROPE

The pan-European STOXX 600 index closed down 0.3 per cent on Wednesday.

Shares in Air France KLM suffered their worst day in more than a decade after the Dutch government said it would take a 14 per cent stake in the airline. The move highlighted tensions between the Netherlands and its French partners in the company. Air France shares tumbled 11.74 per cent to €11.24.

Nivea skin-cream maker Beiersdorf plunged to two-year lows after it issued a shock warning about its 2019 operating margins, with the company's new chief executive declaring the consumer goods industry was in "turmoil". Beiersdorf's stock slid 9.81 per cent to €81.98 dragging down other consumers goods names Unilever, Henkel and Reckitt Benckiser.

Bank stocks were an outlier, rising 1.5 per cent after Bundesbank president Jens Weidmann said the European Central Bank need not formally delay a planned interest rate increase.

NEW YORK

Wall Street's main indices extended losses on Wednesday after US trade representative Robert Lighthizer said the country's issues with China were "too serious" to be resolved by promises of more purchases of US goods by Beijing.

Shares of Mylan sank 12.1 per cent after the generic drugmaker missed quarterly profit estimates and forecast weak 2019 earnings. Best Buy Co jumped 15.8 per cent after the consumer electronics retailer beat analysts' estimates for quarterly same-store sales, while announcing a hike in dividend and a plan to buy back shares

The energy sector rose 1 percent on the back of higher oil prices. Exxon Mobil and Chevron led gains on the Dow, with a 1 per cent rise. – Additional reporting - Reuters

Barry O'Halloran

Barry O'Halloran

Barry O’Halloran covers energy, construction, insolvency, and gaming and betting, among other areas