Latest News

European shares increase as US luxury spending boosts stocks

European shares increase as US luxury spending boosts stocks

The European stock market reached its highest level in over a week Tuesday. This was boosted by the rally of luxury goods companies due to higher U.S. consumer spending, and wind energy stocks that gained after a U.S. court ruled Orsted can restart work on an offshore project in the U.S.

The pan-European STOXX 600 ended the session up 0.4% after reaching its highest level since September 16 during the session. The majority of regional bourses closed up as well.

Portugal's stocks closed their most recent high in over three weeks, after the country met its 2025 budget surplus target. This allowed it to reduce its debt ratio.

Luxury stocks like LVMH, L'Oreal, and Richemont all ranked among the top 10 gainers in the STOXX. BofA data revealed that American luxury spending was positive for the first month in 37 months in September.

Orsted shares jumped by 4% following a U.S. Federal Judge's ruling that the Danish offshore developer can restart work on an almost finished wind farm off the coasts of Rhode Island.

Laura Cooper, Nuveen's global investment strategist, has a positive outlook for the clean energy industry.

Retailers rose nearly 2%. Kingfisher, the home improvement retailer, saw a 14.6% increase in its profit forecast for the full year.

Ireland's Kingspan Group rose 8.2% following the announcement of plans to IPO 25% of its ADVNSYS data centre unit, which could result in debt-free status for the building materials manufacturer.

The technology index gained 0.6% after Wall Street tech stocks rose as Nvidia announced it would invest $100 billion into OpenAI, and provide it with data center chips.

Since then, European stocks have lagged behind U.S. counterparts, as AI optimism has lifted America's technology giants.

S&P 500 has gained close to 14 percent so far this season, while the STOXX 600 is up about 9.3 percent.

The healthcare subindex dropped 1.2%, ending its longest winning streak of more than one month. Shares of Roche and Novo Nordisk fell more than 2 percent each.

The data show that the euro zone's growth remained stable, boosted by Germany's fiscal power, which helped to offset France's economic worries. However, storm clouds are gathering, as U.S. Tariffs start to bite.

The French economy contracted over the same time period, while British companies reported a decline in momentum and confidence.

Huw Pill, the Bank of England's Chief Economist, struck a cautiously positive tone. He said he felt more confident about inflation prospects this year than earlier in the year.

In Sweden, central bank cut its policy rate from 2% to 1.5% and announced a long-term pause. Stockholm's benchmark closed 0.7% higher after reaching a near-month-high. Reporting by Shashwat Chandhyap and Pranav Kashyap from Bengaluru, and Amir Orusov from Gdansk. Editing by Sherry Phillips, Niveditarjee Bhattacharjee, and Alex Richardson.

(source: Reuters)