European stocks drop; London off record high

European stocks drop; London off record high
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Summary London's benchmark FTSE 100 index dropped 0.37 percent from Tuesday.

LONDON (AFP) - European stock markets fell Wednesday, taking the steam out of a rally that pushed London to record highs the previous day.

London s benchmark FTSE 100 index dropped 0.37 percent from Tuesday s close to stand at 6,924.00 points in afternoon trading.

Frankfurt s DAX 30 edged down 0.08 percent to 11,196.87 points and the CAC 40 index in Paris lost 0.29 percent to 4,872.27.

The euro nudged higher to $1.1347 from $1.1342 late in New York on Tuesday.

"Once again the FTSE appears to be suffering from stage fright as the looming 7,000 level, for so long predicted to be broken, has yet again proven to be a step too far," said Alastair McCaig, market analyst at IG trading group.

Europe s main stock markets had risen on Tuesday, with London s FTSE index of 100 companies closing at its highest level ever, at 6,949.63 points, after eurozone finance ministers backed an extension of Greece s bailout.

The index had been rising steadily for months, helped by central bank stimulus and improvements to the British and US economies that have offset weakness in China and strains in the eurozone.

On Wall Street, the Dow and S&P 500 indices bolted to fresh record highs on Tuesday after Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen pledged a cautious approach to raising US interest rates.

"Janet Yellen s testimony to Congress yesterday, while on the face it a repeat of her dovish stance, does move the Fed closer to raising interest rates," said Neil MacKinnon, economist at financial group VTB Capital.

Traders were also eyeing a second day of congressional testimony by Yellen.

Elsewhere, the hard work began for Greece s new anti-austerity government as it sought to live up to promises made not only to international creditors but also to voters expecting relief from years of painful cuts.

On Tuesday Athens secured -- but only just -- a four-month extension to its lifeline bailout programme, although the German and Greek parliaments still have to give the green light.

If they say no, which is unlikely, the 240 billion euro bailout expires on Saturday. This could spark national bankruptcy, a run on banks and even a chaotic exit from the eurozone with untold wider consequences.

To win this breathing space, Greece presented its creditors with reform proposals focusing on tackling tax evasion, corruption and an efficiency drive throughout government including eliminating politicians  perks.

On the corporate front, shares in engineering firm Weir Group collapsed almost 10 percent.

"Weir Group said it expected a significant reduction in revenue on a constant currency basis, as well as lower operating margins in 2015," noted David Papier, market analyst at ETX Capital.

French insurance group AXA, number two in Europe after German giant Allianz, jumped 3.0 percent after posting a 12 percent surge in net profits to 5.02 billion euros last year.

Telefonica won 1.7 percent despite the Spanish telecoms group reporting a plunge in annual net profits to 3.0 billion euros, citing Venezuela s economic crisis and other exceptional costs.

Asian stocks ended mixed despite another record close on Wall Street after Yellen dampened speculation of a rate rise before summer.

Shanghai closed down 0.56 percent despite a survey showing Chinese factory activity expanded in February, snapping two consecutive months of contraction.

Hong Kong, meanwhile, added 0.11 percent.

Sydney rose 0.30 percent, and Seoul added 0.73 percent.

But Tokyo closed 0.10 percent lower as investors took profits after a five-day winning streak.


 

Wall Street pulls back


Wall Street stocks dipped from record highs in opening trade Wednesday following mixed earnings reports.

Five minutes into trade, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.06 percent to 18,197.37 points.

The broad-based S&P 500 dipped 0.08 percent to 2,113.77, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index shed 0.17 percent to 4,959.88.

Home-improvement retailer Lowe s gained 0.2 percent after reporting a 47 percent jump in fourth-quarter earnings following a 7.3 percent rise in comparable sales.

But technology giant Hewlett-Packard sank 9.1 percent as first-quarter earnings dropped 4.1 percent. The company warned that the impact of the strong dollar on earnings this year will be "significantly greater than we expected in November."

 

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