Europe open: Stocks off lows after Barcelona attacks

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Sharecast News | 18 Aug, 2017

Stocks have started the session lower, tracking a big drop in US stocks overnight even as traders digest a terrorist attack on Barcelona and an another against a town to its south which was foiled by police.

As of 0814 BST, the pan-European benchmark Stoxx 600 was down by 0.92% or 3.47 points to 373.40, alongside a 0.93% or 113.25 point drop for the German Dax and a 57.21 points or 1.11% fall in the Cac-40.

Traditional safe haven assets were finding a modest bid on Friday morning, with December 2017 COMEX gold up by 0.56% to $1,299.60/oz. while dollar/yen was down by 0.5% to 109.01.

Despite Thursday night's tragic events in Barcelona, selling in Travel & Tourism stocks was restrained, with the corresponding Stoxx 600 gauge off by 1.21% to 247.06.

Commenting on the market backdrop, Henry Croft at Accendo Markets said: "A tragic terror attack striking at the heart of Barcelona, killing 13, has shaken European futures overnight, while a tweet yesterday indicating that Gary Cohn, Director of the National Economic Council and a critical influence on policy decisions in the White House, had resigned from his post shocked US markets shortly after the open. Despite the tweet being deleted and officially denied by the White House, the damage had already been done, and comments suggesting that there was "no smoke without fire" soon emerged."

On the economic front, producer prices in Germany rose by 0.2% on the month in July and by 2.3% on the year, according to the Federal Office of Statistics. In June, producer prices increased at a 2.4% year-on-year pace

Economists had forecast a flat reading on the month and a 2.2% rise year-on-year.

On the economic calendar for Friday are euro area current account data for June at 0900 BST, followed by construction output data an hour afterwards.

Stateside, the University of Michigan's preliminary reading on consumer confidence in August is set to be published on 1500 BST.

Meanwhile, on the corporate front, Air Berlin announced the indefinite postponement of its first half results, DPA reported.

Stock in Deutsche Bank was down after the German lender and Bank of America reached a $65.5m settlement on accusations that they rigged the approximately $9trn US government agency bond market.

Roughly 800 shareholders have sued Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena for in excess of €800m, alleging they were misled into investing by erroneous balance sheets and prospectuses.

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