European shares slip on worries over North Korea nuclear test

Reuters

Published Sep 04, 2017 01:19PM ET

European shares slip on worries over North Korea nuclear test

By Danilo Masoni

MILAN (Reuters) - News of North Korea's latest nuclear test hit European shares on Monday but failed to trigger a massive sell-off as investors seem to get used geopolitical tensions.

The pan-European STOXX 600 (STOXX) index and euro zone blue chips (STOXX50E) both fell 0.5 percent and all major bourses, from the UK's FTSE (FTSE) to France's CAC 40 (FCHI), posted declines from 0.3 to 0.8 percent.

"Equity markets in Europe are in the red today as tensions surrounding North Korea were heightened again on the back of the nuclear bomb test carried out by the regime over the weekend", said David Madden from CMC Markets.

"Traders are clearly nervous, as stocks are lower, but the sell-off today hasn’t been as bad a previous ones", the market analyst argued.

North Korea said it tested an advanced hydrogen bomb for a long-range missile on Sunday, prompting a warning of a "massive" military response from the United States if it or its allies were threatened.

"An H-bomb is undeniably different from the previous missile launches or nuclear tests ... However, the biggest question to investors remains - what’s next? Will the tensions lead to negotiations, or war?" said Hussein Sayed, chief market strategist at FXTM.

Uncertainty over the response to the latest North Korean test worried investors, leading to a spike in stock market volatility. Europe's volatility index (V2TX) was up 1.5 points.

While no sector in Europe ended in positive territory, stocks in the financial services (SX7P) industry had the worst day, losing 1 percent.

Gains in safe-haven assets, including gold, sent precious metal miners Randgold (L:RRS) and Fresnillo (L:FRES) up 2 and 2.9 percent respectively, while Polymetal (L:POLYP) got further support from a JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) upgrade to "neutral" from "underweight".

Fiat Chrysler (MI:FCHA) fell 1.3 percent after Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne said the carmaker had not received an offer for the company nor was it working on any "big deal". His comments cooled down talk of possible M&A deal that had sent the stock to record highs last week

Pharma heavyweight Novartis (S:NOVN) ended down 1 percent as the group said its chief executive, Joseph Jimenez, would retire in 2018, and chief drug developer Vasant Narasimhan, 41, would run the company from February.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

"Making a head of R&D CEO of an organization raises some questions for us", UBS said in a research note, arguing that commercial and clinical success were two very different things.

Novartis (S:NOVN) shares, which have the third largest weight on the MSCI Europe benchmark, have underperformed their sector over the last 10 years.

Gemalto (AS:GTO) fell 10 percent after both Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn) and Kepler Cheuvreux cut their price targets for the Dutch digital security company. Deutsche Bank said its structurally declining product areas remained too large to ignore.