Europe close: Indices end the day flat despite gains for banks

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Sharecast News | 27 Oct, 2016

Updated : 18:58

European stocks wavered on Thursday as investors digested uninspiring Chinese data and sifted through more earnings releases, although banks outperformed alongside another leg up in sovereign bond yields.

The benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 index and Germany’s DAX were little changed, with the latter off by 0.01% to 341.71 by the closing bell and the Frankfurt benchmark up by 0.07%, while France’s CAC 40 slipped 0.02%.

The Stoxx 600 gauge of lenders´ shares finished up by 1.0% for the session.

Crude oil futures were higher, recovering from the sharp losses seen on Wednesday on the back of growing doubts over OPEC’s proposed production cut.

West Texas Intermediate tacked on 1.34% to finish at $49.85 a barrel and Brent crude was 1.36% firmer at $50.67.

Sentiment was undermined somewhat by data showing a decline in Chinese industrial profit growth last month. Figures released earlier by the National Bureau of Statistics revealed profits in September were up 7.7% to 577.1bn yuan, slowing significantly from a 19.5% increase in September.

At the same time, market participants were sinking their teeth into a series of bank earnings. Deutsche Bank drifted just a touch lower after it swung to an unexpected profit in the third quarter; net income came in at €278m versus analysts’ expectations for a loss of around €610m.

CMC Markets’ Jasper Lawler said: “The results are especially welcome since a lot of the trouble surrounding the bank has focused on its inability to produce the profits necessary to pay its litigation costs. Litigation costs for DB were reduced in the quarter, bolstering the numbers. However the US Department of Justice will make sure that’s not the case in the following quarters.”

In London, Barclays advanced after reporting a 35% rise in third-quarter pre-tax profit to £837m as revenue from the fixed income division surged 40%.

Spains’ BBVA rallied as it posted a better-than-expected 23% jump in third-quarter profit.

Away from banks, Amec Foster Wheeler cratered after it postponed its capital markets day until next year and said it expects a further drop in oil and gas revenue in 2017.

Nokia suffered big losses after the telecom equipment maker posted a net loss for the third quarter and cautioned that network markets were tough.

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