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    European shares end higher as markets cheer China’s stimulus plans By Reuters

    Anthony M. OrbisonBy Anthony M. OrbisonSeptember 24, 2024No Comments2 Mins Read
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    1727196313 European shares end higher as markets cheer Chinas stimulus plans
    1727196313 European shares end higher as markets cheer Chinas stimulus plans
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    By Pranav Kashyap and Shashwat Chauhan

    (Reuters) – European shares ended higher on Tuesday, with China-exposed firms such as luxury giants and automakers at the helm of gains after China’s central bank unveiled broad stimulus measures to aid its ailing economy.

    The pan-European index closed 0.7% higher. The stand out regional performer with a 1.3% jump was France, which is home to a host of luxury brands.

    China’s central bank announced broad monetary stimulus and property market support measures to revive an economy grappling with strong deflationary pressures and in danger of missing this year’s growth target.

    “Today’s announcement has helped lift confidence, it will also support household consumption and ease debt servicing pain,” economists at TS Lombard wrote in a note led by chief China economist Rory Green.

    “But (it’s) insufficient to put a floor under the property market and wider economy. A substantial nominal growth slump is baked in.”

    A gauge of European luxury firms, which rely heavily on Chinese consumer spending, were the biggest boost on the index, rising 2.5%.

    LVMH added 3.2%, while Cartier-owner Richemont also gained 4.1%.

    Basic resources led gains amongst the major STOXX sectors, jumping 4.4%, its biggest single-day gain in over 22 months, as base metal prices advanced on improving China demand prospects. [MET/L]

    Other China-exposed sectors such as autos and industrials also gained 1.1% and 0.6%, respectively.

    Most local bourses ended higher, though UK’s midcap index slipped 0.4%, bogged down by a 6.3% fall in homeware retailer Dunelm after its top shareholder, and his private investment firm sold a 4.9% stake in the company.

    On the data front, German business morale fell for a fourth straight month in September and by more than expected, a survey showed, adding to signs that the euro zone’s biggest economy may have tipped into recession.

    Germany’s leading economic institutes have downgraded their forecast for 2024 and now see the economy shrinking by 0.1%, people familiar with the figures from the autumn joint economic forecast told Reuters.

    Later this week, rate decisions in Switzerland and Sweden will also be on investors’ radar.

    Among individual stock moves, UK engineering firm Smiths Group (OTC:) lost 5.2% after its annual profit missed estimates.

    Saab dipped 9.3% after BofA Global Research cut its rating on the Swedish defence firm to “neutral” from “buy”.



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