Bank earnings drag Europe lower as merger talks boost carmakers

Reuters

Published Oct 30, 2019 05:58AM ET

By Agamoni Ghosh and Lisa Pauline Mattackal

(Reuters) - European shares inched lower on Wednesday as weak bank earnings and doubts over an interim U.S.-China trade deal spurred selling, although losses were limited by excitement over merger talks between Fiat Chrysler (MI:FCHA) and France's PSA (PA:PEUP).

By 0930 GMT, the pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) was down just 0.1%, with banks (SX7P) leading losses after disappointing results from some of the region's top lenders.

Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn) fell 6%, putting it at the bottom of the benchmark index, as it reported a loss for the second consecutive quarter due to the costs of its wide-ranging global restructuring.

"The losses were massive, so it's no surprise that investors aren't too happy," said Connor Campbell, financial analyst at Spreadex. "Even though the CFO's tried to say that earnings are a little bit better than in the interim planning, it's enough to spook investors."

The euro zone's biggest lender, Santander, (MC:SAN) slid 2% as net profit fell 75% due to one-off charges in the UK, while Swiss lender Credit Suisse (S:CSGN) lost over 3% after issuing a cautious 2020 outlook.

Expectations had been low going into the European corporate earnings season, and after three weeks the overall picture has proved better than expected, with most companies modestly beating estimates.

Trade-sensitive tech (SX8P) and commodity-linked stocks (SXPP) took a hit on Wednesday as concerns over the U.S.-China trade pact resurfaced after a U.S. administration official told Reuters the deal might not be completed in time for the leaders of the two countries to sign in Chile next month.

MERGER TALKS DRIVE AUTOS

Auto stocks (SXAP) hit their highest level in nearly six months after Italian-American carmaker Fiat Chrysler (MI:FCHA) confirmed it was in merger talks with French rival PSA (PA:PEUP) on a deal that would reshape the global industry.

Shares of both companies rose between 7% and 8%, with Peugeot hitting an 11-year high. Shares in another French carmaker, Renault (PA:RENA), which was in talks with Fiat earlier this year about a similar deal, slid 3.5%.

"The deal is geographically complementarily given FCA's strong hold in North America and PSA's footing in Asia and (the) rest of the world," Martino De Ambroggi, senior equities analyst at Equita, wrote in a note.

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