European shares rose on Thursday, with the Iseq in Dublin soaring 100 points above the level it was at before the Brexit referendum, as the euro tumbled to its weakest level since late 2002 against the dollar.
The currency move was driven by the Federal Reserve’s move on Wednesday to signal it is likely to increase interest rates three times next year, a faster pace than the market had been expecting.
The pan-European Stoxx 60 index rose by 0.9 per cent to close at its highest level since the start of January.
DUBLIN
The Iseq index surged 1.7 per cent to 6,471.52 points, a level last seen before the UK decided by referendum in June to exit the
European Union
.
Bank of Ireland stood out as a particularly strong spot, jumping 6.1 per cent to 24.4c. Analysts expect bank earnings to rise globally in an environment of rising US interest rates and bond yields. Increasing bond yields would also help rein in the bank's pension deficit.
Companies heavily exposed to the US for profits were also in demand, with CRH adding 1.9 per cent to €32.45, while Glanbia increased 3.1 per cent to €15.78.
Bucking the trend, Kenmare Resources dropped 5.2 per cent to €2.93 as a rising dollar sent commodity prices tumbling.
LONDON
The FTSE 100 index rose 0.7 per cent to 6,999.01, as sterling also weakened against the dollar.
Sky gained 0.5 per cent after Rupert Murdoch's 21st Century Fox tabled a formal £11.7 billion (€14 billion) takeover offer for the broadcaster. The deal, which shareholders will still have to vote on, comes five years after the media tycoon's last tilt at taking full control of the business through News Corporation.
Shares in Punch Taverns jumped 7.9 per cent on news that the pub operator has agreed to carve up its estate as part of a takeover by Heineken and private equity firm Patron Capital. The deal values Punch at £402.7 million.
Centrica added 5.6 per cent after the owner of British Gas and Bord Gais Energy upped its full-year earnings outlook and revealed it has stemmed the flow of energy customers quitting the business.
EUROPE
The European banking index surged 2.5 per cent to end the session at an 11-month high.
Deutsche Bank, BNP Paribas, HSBC, Santander
and
Credit Suisse
rose between 1.5 per cent and 5.3 percent after the Federal Reserve’s move.
Also helping financials, Italian banks rose 4.4 per cent and were on course for a third straight week of gains.
The banks have staged a rebound since Paolo Gentiloni was appointed prime minister, on expectations that a stable political environment will help ailing banks to recapitalise.
The Italian government is reportedly ready to pump €15 billion into Monte dei Paschi di Siena and other ailing banks.
Spain's Grifols rose 6.7 per cent after saying it would buy US Hologic's assets in their blood-screening joint venture and refinance its net debt in the first quarter of next year. But French utility EDF fell 12.7 per cent, wiping about €2.5 billion from its market value, after warning of lower earnings in 2017.
NEW YORK
US stocks were off their highs but continued to hover near record levels on mid-afternoon trading on Wall Street as investors viewed the Federal Reserve’s interest rate outlook as a sign of confidence in the economy.
The Dow Jones Industrial average was up 0.6 per cent, at 19,900.45 points, while the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq had gained by similar rates.
Banking stocks were also among the main gainers, with JP Morgan, Wells Fargo and Bank of America advancing between 1.5 per cent and 2.5 per cent, while Goldman Sachs jumped 4.3 per cent.
However, Yahoo slumped by 4.8 per cent after the technology company disclosed a second massive data breach that raised fears Verizon might kill a deal to buy its core internet business. Verizon was up 0.7 per cent.
– (Additional reporting: Bloomberg, Reuters)