European stocks' relief rally fades, growth concerns rise

Reuters

Published May 05, 2022 03:23AM ET

Updated May 05, 2022 12:32PM ET

By Sruthi Shankar and Shreyashi Sanyal

(Reuters) - European stocks fell for the second straight session on Thursday, with most major sectors handing back earlier gains made after less hawkish comments from the Federal Reserve.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index closed 0.7% lower, led by the travel and leisure, banking and insurance sectors.

Investors were relieved after the Fed raised interest rates by 50 basis points on Wednesday, with Chairman Jerome Powell explicitly ruling out a 75 basis point hike in a coming meeting, but the rally in European stocks faded just as Wall Street opened lower on Thursday. [.N]

"European equity markets were firmly in positive territory this morning, but the aggressive move lower in the U.S. is hurting stocks on this side of the Atlantic," said David Madden, market analyst at Equiti Capital.

"It seems that fears about lower growth in the U.S. are still in circulation despite the Fed not acting excessively hawkish."

Worries about quicker interest rate increases, China's COVID lockdowns, the Ukraine conflict and surging inflation have all weighed on stock markets this year, dragging the STOXX 600 down more than 10% so far.

"The rise in energy prices and inflation happened quite quickly and that's taken people by surprise, so there is an element of sticker shock," said Niall Gallagher, investment director for European equities at GAM Investments.

Credit Suisse (SIX:CSGN) fell 2.8% after it froze 10.4 billion Swiss francs ($10.63 billion) of wealthy clients' assets in the first quarter under sanctions imposed in connection with Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Airbus gained 6.3% after the world's biggest planemaker reported a higher-than-expected quarterly profit and firmed up record plans for a 50% hike in key narrowbody jet output.

Oil giant Shell (LON:RDSa) rose 3.1%, lifting the oil and gas sector, after reporting a record first-quarter profit of $9.13 billion, boosted by higher oil and gas prices and a strong performance of its trading division.

About half of the STOXX 600 companies have reported quarterly results so far, and 71% of those have topped analysts' profit estimates, as per Refintiv IBES data. Typically, 52% beat estimates in a quarter.