European stocks rise as Putin hints at progress in Ukraine talks

Reuters

Published Mar 11, 2022 06:41AM ET

Updated Mar 11, 2022 12:40PM ET

By Anisha Sircar, Bansari Mayur Kamdar and Susan Mathew

(Reuters) -European shares marked their biggest weekly gain this year, as signals from Russian President Vladimir Putin about a positive shift in talks with Ukraine helped markets end a volatile week on a firmer footing on Friday.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index closed 1% higher, and snapped three weeks of losses, adding 4% on the week as stellar gains for beaten down stocks outweighed declines from worries over the fallout from the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war.

Putin said on Friday there had been some progress and "positive shifts" in Moscow's talks with Ukraine, without elaborating, immediately lifting investor sentiment.

"Investors might find that trying to build a rally on comments from Vladimir Putin is a bit of a fool's errand, but that has been the theme of the day," said Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at online trading platform IG.

The German DAX surged 1.4%, logging its best week in a year, while Spain's IBEX and France's CAC 40 were up 0.9% each.

Britain's FTSE rose 0.8%, bolstered by data that showed a strong rebound in the economy. (L)

"European markets, like the DAX, already were pricing quite a big profit hit," said Dhaval Joshi, chief strategist at BCA Research.

"So any sort of positive news gives a sharp reversal because there's already quite a lot of bad news priced in," he said, but warned that markets are not fully pricing in second round effects such as the cutting off of important exports from Ukraine like agricultural exports.

The European Central Bank on Thursday paved the way for an interest rate hike as soaring inflation outweighed concerns about the fallout from Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Euro zone banks recovered 4.5% this week, posting their best week in two months, after dropping nearly 19% last week due to their large exposure to Russia.

Investors stampeded out of European equities at their fastest pace on record, the Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) said in a weekly report, with investors pulling out $13.5 billion from European stocks as the war forced investors to seek shelter in safe-haven assets such as gold and cash.

Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) downgraded its 2022 euro area growth forecast on Thursday to 2.5% from 3.9%, citing risks of further escalation in the Russia-Ukraine crisis.