European shares stable as mining gains offset media losses

Theresa May’s Brexit speech weighed on Irish stocks as well as shares in London

The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq were little changed in early trading on Wednesday as gains in tech stocks offset a weakness in the retail sector, while the Dow was pulled lower by healthcare shares. Photograph: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg
The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq were little changed in early trading on Wednesday as gains in tech stocks offset a weakness in the retail sector, while the Dow was pulled lower by healthcare shares. Photograph: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg

European shares closed little changed as miners advanced, offsetting a decline in media shares led by Pearson.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index rose 0.2 per cent at the close. In Ireland, the Iseq declined by 0.44 per cent to 6,541.58.

DUBLIN

Some of the big names on the exchange booked losses, partly influenced by Theresa May’s hard Brexit speech.

Bank of Ireland shares fell by 2.9 per cent to 23.8 cent. The bank has about 40 per cent of its balance sheet in the UK.

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Ryanair closed down 1.7 per cent, Smurfit Kappa finished 3.3 per cent lower and recruiter CPL was 1 per cent off at the close. Permanent TSB announced a reshuffle of its executive management team, finishing 3 per cent lower at €2.62 per cent.

Property Reits Green, Hibernia and IRES closed up by between 0.5 and 2 per cent, while food company Glanbia finished 1.6 per cent ahead at €16.10.

LONDON

Sterling lost its footing on Wednesday as the dollar strengthened and investors backtracked on initial enthusiasm around UK prime minister Theresa May’s Brexit speech.

The pound slumped more than 0.7 per cent to 1.231 against the US dollar, after climbing more than 3 per cent to 1.241 a day earlier. Against the euro, the pound fell 0.5 per cent to 1.153.

It gave a minor boost to the FTSE 100, which closed 0.38 per cent higher at 7,247.61.

BT Group shares fell 2.85p to 380.55p after communications regulator Ofcom fined its mobile phone arm EE £2.7 million for overcharging 40,000 customers for calling the company's service number while roaming within the EU.

Burberry shares rose 57p to 1,650p as the luxury fashion group hailed an “exceptional” festive performance in the UK as booming tourist trade helped send sales surging by around 40 per cent.

Shares in Pearson — the former owner of the Financial Times — plunged 235p to 573p after the education publisher warned underlying profitability was lower than previously expected and said it was planning to sell its publishing unit Penguin Random House.

EUROPE

Commodity producers advanced 1.4 per cent, the most among industry groups, extending their 2017 gains. Stoxx 600 miners rose for the seventh time in eight days, with ArcelorMittal climbing to a six-week high after Commerzbank AG recommended buying the stock.

Investors are preparing for the European Central Bank’s policy meeting on Thursday, when they’ll look for clues as to when the institution may begin curtailing its stimulus measures.

NEW YORK

The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq were little changed in early trading on Wednesday as gains in tech stocks offset a weakness in the retail sector, while the Dow was pulled lower by healthcare shares.

The S&P 500 consumer discretionary sector was the biggest drag on the broader index, falling 0.4 per cent as Target weighed.

The big-box retailer’s shares fell 5.5 per cent – their biggest single-day drop since August – after the brick-and-mortar chain reported dismal results for the holiday season and cut its quarterly earnings forecast.

Bigger rival and Dow component Wal-Mart was off 0.8 per cent.

A frenetic post-election rally in US equities has hit a speed bump in recent weeks as investors wait for Trump to work on his campaign promises.

The markets, which have received little detail on his policy plans, expect to get more insight during his inaugural speech on Friday.

Additional reporting by Bloomberg and Reuters

Ciarán Hancock

Ciarán Hancock

Ciarán Hancock is Business Editor of The Irish Times