Stocks recover from coronavirus scares

Markets close: Banks and luxury goods companies led the recovery, while leisure and airline stocks also clawed back losses

European stock markets rebounded on Tuesday, having lost ground in recent sessions due to fears of the impact of China’s coronavirus outbreak.
European stock markets rebounded on Tuesday, having lost ground in recent sessions due to fears of the impact of China’s coronavirus outbreak.

European stock markets rebounded on Tuesday, having lost ground in recent sessions due to fears of the impact of China’s coronavirus outbreak.

Banks and luxury goods companies led the recovery, while leisure and airline stocks also clawed back losses as investors took the view that the right steps were being taken to contain the illness.

Dublin

The Iseq managed a 0.3 per cent climb, a rise that underperformed the major European indices. Building materials company CRH recovered only 0.1 per cent of its 2 per cent Monday slip to finish at €34.27.

Ryanair posted a more convincing gain, closing up 0.85 per cent at €14.84, while packaging company Smurfit Kappa was up 0.8 per cent at €31.72.

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It was a good day for Glanbia, which advanced 0.9 per cent to €10.90, while another food group, Kerry, was up 0.3 per cent at €116.90.

Bank of Ireland advanced 1.75 per cent to €4.53. There were few fallers, but among them were AIB, down 0.4 per cent at €2.64, and Kingspan, down 0.2 per cent at €56.80.

London

The FTSE 100 added 0.9 per cent, while the mid-cap FTSE 250 gained 0.6 per cent. Virgin Money UK rallied 4 per cent after reporting higher loan book growth, while Irn-Bru maker AG Barr soared 15.4 per cent on the mid-cap stock's best day since October 2005 after it forecast annual profit to be at the top end of the current market view.

Shares in Unilever, AstraZeneca and Reckitt Benckiser all climbed 2 per cent as sterling dipped on concerns about Britain's future relationship with the EU, and ahead of a Bank of England meeting this week.

InterContinental Hotels, one of the stocks that had declined since the outbreak of the coronavirus, gained 3.1 per cent.

Among smaller stocks, tourism and insurance firm Saga advanced 7.6 per cent after saying it was on track to meet its annual profit outlook, despite a one-off charge related to the collapse of Thomas Cook last year.

London-listed Irish food company Greencore fell 1 per cent as it highlighted the challenging trading environment in an update to investors.

Europe

Luxury goods makers LVMH, Kering and Moncler, all of which derive a chunk of their demand from China, rose after sliding more than 3 per cent on Monday. Bolstered also by a recovery on Wall Street, the Stoxx 600 ended up 0.8 per cent. Along with most other major country indices, the benchmark index had lost more than 2 per cent in the previous session.

Capping gains were shares of Europe's most valuable technology company SAP, which dropped 2.1 per cent as some analysts pointed to its slowing cloud revenue growth. Philips slipped 2.1 per cent after the Dutch health technology company's quarterly sales fell short of estimates.

In Germany, the Dax rose 0.9 per cent, while the French Cac 40 finished 1.1 per cent higher.

US

Wall Street rose as gains in technology and financial sectors helped major indexes recover from their worst sell-off in about four months.

Corporate results were mixed, with US industrial giant 3M sliding 5.7 per cent in early trading after it forecast 2020 profit below expectations as it faced sluggish demand in Asia. Pfizer fell 3.9 per cent after the drugmaker reported a lower-than-expected quarterly profit.

Harley-Davidson dropped 3.75 per cent after capping its fifth straight annual US sales drop with quarterly profit that missed estimates.

Shares in Xerox jumped 5.4 per cent after it forecast 2020 profit above Wall Street expectations, while defence giant Lockheed Martin rose after reporting sales that beat analysts' estimates.

The market also awaited quarterly earnings from companies including Apple and Starbucks. Investors will keep a close watch on Apple's earnings amid concerns of a disruption in iPhone production in China.

–– Additional reporting: Reuters