Bourses rally as Wall St concerns fade

Bourses rallied, reversing two sessions of decline as worries about the outlook for US interest rates came off the boil

Bourses rallied, reversing two sessions of decline as worries about the outlook for US interest rates came off the boil. Aided by a bright start on Wall Street, the FTSE Euro-bloc 100 index, the euro zone benchmark, ended 1 per cent higher at 1,046.06. The FTSE Eurotop 100 index, which also covers non-Euro zone countries, added 1.2 per cent at 2,918.62, while the broader FTSE Eurotop 300 index improved 1 per cent to 1,270.33.

Frankfurt drove higher, reversing a two-day decline of 146 on the Xetra Dax index with a rally of 58.47 to 5,160.47. Goldman Sachs swung firmly behind the insurance sector, upgrading both Munich Re and Allianz. The broker set target prices of €210 and €310 respectively for the two insurance giants, which gained €2.90 to €166 and €7.40 to €272.

DaimlerChrysler jumped €2.59 to €89.15. In chemicals, Hoechst gained €1.60 to €42.60. Construction leader Hochtief surged €5 to €42. Paris pushed ahead strongly, buoyed by better figures than expected for April US housing starts. The CAC-40 index closed 63.80 or 1.5 per cent higher at 4,312.74.

Technology stocks benefited from Monday's 1.3 per cent rise in the US Nasdaq Composite. Cap Gemini rose €7.90 or 6.1 per cent to €136.50, while STMicroelectronics gained €3.60 or 3.2 per cent to end at €115.20.

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France Telecom prospered, with investors switching back to the stock as a result of the lack of market support for Deutsche Telekom's plan to merge with Telecom Italia. France Telecom gained €2.45 or 3.4 per cent to end at €74.45.

Amsterdam ended within a whisker of its best of the session, with the AEX index up 6.36 at 550.20. Philips was a strong market, rising €1.45 to €86.65 on the news of a $1.6 billion acquisition in South Korea where the electronics giant is taking a 50 per cent stake in a liquid crystal display business.

Semiconductor maker ASM Lithography pushed higher in good volumes. The stock gained €2.60 to €41.90 in 3.2 million shares traded. Brewer Heineken jumped €2.45 to €53.65 with some traders switching out of Bass. Financials were mixed amid the US-driven interest rate uncertainty. ABN Amro lost 15 cents at €20.60, but Aegon pushed ahead strongly, up €3.40 at €81.

Royal Dutch stayed out in the cold, shedding 75 cents at €51.85 for a two-day decline of 4 per cent as international oil prices edged down from recent peaks.

Madrid gave back early gains amid uncertainty about US interest rates. Telefonica, which accounts for about one-fifth of the blue-chip Ibex35 index, retreated after an early rise on news of its results. The general index closed at 886.95, up 1.6 or 0.2 per cent, after peaking at 890.87.