European shares dip on trade tensions, Italy banks buoyed

Reuters  |  Author 

Published Sep 05, 2018 05:21AM ET

European shares dip on trade tensions, Italy banks buoyed

By Julien Ponthus

LONDON (Reuters) - European shares traded lower on Wednesday as trade tensions and growing worries about emerging market currencies cut investor appetite for risky assets.

At 0826 GMT, the pan-European STOXX 600 (STOXX) was down 0.7 percent, with losses spread across industry sectors and trading centers despite data showing that Euro zone business activity accelerated slightly in August.

A rare glimmer of optimism lifted Italy's banks, buoyed by deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini saying that Rome would "try to be good" with respect to European Union budget rules.

Rating agency Scope also issued a note saying that while "volatile politics have reignited fears around Italian banks", there has been progress on non-performing loans.

Shares in UBI Banca (MI:UBI), Banco BPM (MI:BAMI) and Mediobanca (MI:MDBI) were up by 3.2 percent, 2.5 percent and 2.1 percent respectively.

Corporate announcements also triggered strong swings, most notably in French pharmaceutical group BioMerieux (PA:BIOX) which was the best performer on the STOXX 600 index, up by 8.3 percent after better than expected first-half results and a raised 2018 outlook.

In the same sector, Bayer (DE:BAYGn) lost 2 percent after reporting a disappointing 3.9 percent gain in underlying core earnings for the quarter.

Overall, the European Healthcare sector (SXDP) was down 0.8 percent.

Another French firm was also among the highest risers. Outdoor advertising group JCDecaux (PA:JCDX) added 6.8 percent after a rating upgrade by BofA Merrill.

British betting company William Hill (L:WMH) jumped 4.5 percent after it signed a 25-year sports-betting partnership with casino operator Eldorado Resorts (O:ERI), which investors see as a major step in its U.S. expansion.

The biggest faller was Denmark's Ambu (CO:AMBUb) whose shares sank 13 percent after reports of a shareholder selling his stock at a discount.