European stocks turn higher on US debt deal talk

European stocks turn higher on US debt deal talk
Updated on

Summary Sentiment was rattled early in the session as ratings agency Fitch placed the US on warning.

LONDON (AFP) - European stock markets broke into gains on Wednesday, on expectations that US lawmakers would avoid a disastrous default just hours ahead of a deadline.

Sentiment was rattled early in the session as ratings agency Fitch placed the United States on warning for a downgrade from its top-level AAA assessment.

But at close in Europe, Frankfurt s DAX 30 climbed 0.47 percent to set a new record close at 8,846.0 points.

London s benchmark FTSE 100 index added 0.34 percent to 6,571.59 points, while the CAC 40 in Paris rose 0.29 percent to 4,243.72 points.

"Europe s markets moved sharply from losses to gains, gyrating wildly on news flow from Capitol Hill as the 17th October deadline edges into view," said Michael Hewson, Senior Market Analyst at CMC Markets UK.

The United States on Wednesday stood hours from a fateful fiscal deadline, with a chaotic political standoff threatening to trigger a debt default and rock the global economy.

But late in the trading session, it appeared Republican and Democratic leaders in the US Senate had struck an agreement.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Mitch McConnell, the top Republican in the senate, led the negotiations to avert a default after an earlier bid collapsed in a bitterly divided House of Representatives.

Wall Street soared on talk of the deal with the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 1.27 percent in midday trade and the Nasdaq gaining 1.10 percent

But Senate approval of the deal still would have to be ratified by the Republican-controlled House, where a core Tea Party faction has until now vehemently resisted compromise.

The fast-moving developments in Washington sent the European single currency tumbling, falling to $1.3488, compared with $1.3525 late in New York on Tuesday.

Hours earlier, Asian equities closed mixed when doubts were still strong that Congress would eventually reach an agreement.

Hong Kong stocks fell 0.46 percent, Shanghai dipped 1.81 percent and Seoul lost 0.31 percent, while Sydney closed flat and Tokyo rose 0.18 percent.
 

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