Technical Analysis FR40 : 2016-06-28

 | Jun 28, 2016 09:27AM ET

Brexit weighs on French stocks
FTSE 100 stock market index plunged on Friday having opened with a sharp gap lower after the UK referendum decision to leaving the European Union. The French economy accelerated in the first quarter of 2016 but the added uncertainty of EU breakup and the negative impact of recent strikes against controversial labor reforms are expected to result in lower growth rate for the economy in future periods. Will the CAC 40 index continue falling?
France’s CAC 40 tumbled 8% to 4106.73 on Friday as Britain voted to leave the European Union. European countries account for two third of France’s exports and the United Kingdom ranks the fifth in the list of top export partners for the French economy. The British referendum decision to exit from EU added uncertainties to both the UK and EU economic outlook which accounts for the steep losses in all EU market indices. The French economy expanded in the first quarter 0.6% quarter over quarter, accelerating from the 0.4% growth in the Q4. The growth was driven mainly by strong private consumption and investment. The recent economic indicators were positive: industrial production expanded 1.2% in April over the previous month after an 0.4% contraction recorded in March, the consumer confidence index jumped from 94 in April to nine-year high of 98, and the composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) also rose in May. The economic growth is expected to slow due to negative effects of wide protests by labor unions following president Hollande’s approval by special decree in May of a labor reform bill aimed to liberalize the French labor market. The protests involved blocking oil refineries and shutting down nuclear power plants, which resulted in transportation disruptions and lower power generation. On June 28 a lower consumer confidence index for June is expected to be released, on June 30 a marginal increase in headline inflation for June is expected to come out after no change was recorded in CPI in May. And on July 1 and July 5 June Manufacturing and Services PMIs will be published, both are expected to show contraction in respective sectors.