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EUROPEAN stocks inched up to close at a record high on Wednesday helped by gains in defensive sectors, while shares of the world’s second-largest listed fashion retailer H&M saw their strongest day in nearly nine months on upbeat quarterly results.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 edged up 0.1 per cent, underpinned by firmer utilities and healthcare.
Sweden’s H&M was among top performers, surging 15.2 per cent after the retailer reported a stronger than expected first-quarter operating profit, as new CEO Daniel Erver said shoppers liked the brand’s spring collections.
The broader retail sector ended up 2.5 per cent.
“We had a nice set of figures from (H&M) and it shows that maybe they are fighting off those cheaper competitors more effectively and have taken quite a chunk out of the European market,” said Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG Group.
The benchmark index is eyeing a second straight quarterly advance, with a 6.8 per cent gain so far. Dovish signals from major central banks and a rally in technology stocks powered by AI fervour have spurred Stoxx 600 to record highs.
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“The main thing that really seems to come through with investors is the fact that, yes, European markets are sitting at record highs, but they’re still not as expensive as US counterparts,” Beauchamp added.
In focus later in the week will be US February personal consumption expenditure data, that could offer clues on the timing for the Federal Reserve’s first interest rate cut.
Meanwhile, ECB board member Piero Cipollone said the European Central Bank was increasingly confident inflation will fall back to its 2 per cent target by mid-2025 as wage growth moderates.
Sweden’s central bank held its key rate unchanged at 4.00 per cent as expected and said that inflation pressures had now eased enough for the policy rate to be cut in the coming months.
Deutsche Bank gained 2.7 per cent and notched a six-year high after Morgan Stanley upgraded the German lender to “overweight”. The stock was among top performers on Germany’s DAX 40 index which closed 0.5 per cent higher.
Ratings agency Standard & Poor’s cut SBB’s credit rating to selective default from CCC+, adding that the Swedish landlord had selectively defaulted on some of its debt, sending shares of the embattled group down 4.0 per cent.
DS Smith jumped 10.2 per cent after the British paper and packaging firm said it was in talks with International Paper for an all-stock offer valued at £5.72 billion (S$9.73 billion).
European markets will be shut on Friday and Monday for Easter holidays. REUTERS
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