European shares set to open on a flat note

Reuters Updated - January 24, 2018 at 07:48 PM.

European shares were seen kicking off March on a flat note on Monday, with many regional benchmarks hovering at multi-year highs after the best start to the year since they started trading in late 1986.

Futures for the Euro STOXX 50 equity index and Germany’s DAX were up between 0.1 per cent and 0.2 per cent, although futures for France’s CAC and Britais FTSE 100 edged down by 0.2-0.3 per cent by 0747 GMT.

QE programme

European stocks gained 14 per cent in the first two months of the year, boosted by the prospect of the European Central Bank’s quantitative easing programme set to start in March.

Investors’ growing optimism about the euro zone will be put to the test when manufacturing data from the bloc’s largest economies and the currency club as a whole is published between 0845 GMT and 0900 GMT.

Mergers and acquisition activity was set to be in focus.

France’s Orange and Italy’s telecom operator Telecom Italia have been discussing a possible alliance between the former monopolies, Orange’s chief executive told the Journal de Dimanche.

Swiss cement maker Holcim is considering offering its shareholders a sweetener to win their approval for a planned merger with France’s Lafarge, a Swiss newspaper reported on Sunday without citing a source.

Of interest to the tech sector, chip maker NXP Semiconductors NV has agreed to buy smaller peer Freescale Semiconductor Ltd and merge operations in a deal valuing the combined company at over $40 billion.

Austrian banks will also come under scrutiny after the country’s Financial Market Authority stepped in on Sunday to wind down “bad bank’’ Heta Asset Resolution and imposed a moratorium on debt repayments by the vehicle set up last year from the remnants of defunct lender Hypo Alpe Adria.

The tone of the discussions between Greece and its creditors seemed to be softening, with the head of the euro zone finance ministers’ group saying in an interview published on Monday that the country’s international creditors could pay part of the €7.2 billion remaining in its bailout pot as early as this month if Athens starts adopting necessary reforms.

Published on March 2, 2015 08:22