Germany's top share index
hit a new high for 2016 on Tuesday as European shares advanced for a fifth
straight session, boosted by new highs on Wall Street and strong results from
companies like Munich Re.
Germany's DAX closed up 2.5
percent, having hit 10,701.33, its highest level since the last trading day of
2015.
The index is up 16 percent
from its June low and 23 percent from a trough hit in February, meaning in
technical terms it is in "bull market" territory.
The STOXX Europe 600 was up
0.9 percent, in positive territory for a fifth straight session. It is just 0.4
percent away from regaining all of its losses made after Britain voted to leave
the European Union on June 23.
Appetite for equities was
also buoyed as the S&P 500 and Nasdaq both hit fresh record highs on Wall
Street.
While the initial period
following the Brexit vote was volatile, investors have since focussed on the
prospect of continued easy monetary policy, with the Bank of England last week
cutting interest rates for the first time in seven years.
"In the UK and the
U.S., before this episode of Brexit, rates were quite high relative to the rest
of the world. With another UK rate cut later in the year, you're looking at
zero rates," Veronika Pechlaner, European equity fund manager at
Ashburton, said.
"For the moment, this
stimulus seems to have sparked risk assets into action." Top riser on the
German DAX was Munich Re, up 5.7 percent after it said its fall in profit was
smaller than expected and it was on track for its profit target.
Outside Germany, shares of
the telecoms group Altice surged 14.9 percent after the company said
second-quarter core operating profit grew 2.7 percent, beating forecasts in a
Reuters poll, as its Portuguese and U.S. businesses offset a decline in
profitability at its subsidiary SFR.
However, SFR also rose 9.4
percent, after the company said a price war in France's mobile market showed
signs of easing .
Overall, the second-quarter
earnings season has been encouraging so far. Of the 77 percent of companies in
the STOXX Europe 600 index that have reported results, 61 percent have met or
beaten expectations, according to StarMine data.
"European earnings are
surprising on the positive side, which is a confirmation of solid economic
developments in Europe. However, the second half may not be as good due to
uncertainties related to the Brexit and some other political issues in
Europe," UniCredit strategist Christian Stocker said.
European banks seem to be stabilising,
Stocker said, as a lot of negatives were already priced in. He said he had a
"neutral" stance on the sector.
The European banking index
rose 1.1 percent and Britain's leading banks index gained 1.3 percent,
recouping all the losses in sterling terms it suffered after the Brexit vote.
Gains on the UK index have
largely been driven by HSBC Holdings and Standard Chartered. Both have large
operations outside Britain, helping them outperform more domestically focused
banks. Lloyds and Royal Bank of Scotland have lost nearly a quarter of their
value since the referendum.
Credit:Reuters
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