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Europe stocks fall; commodity and defence rallies offset luxury losses

Europe stocks fall; commodity and defence rallies offset luxury losses

Investors analyzed the latest signals from Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell as European stocks fell on Wednesday. The pan-European STOXX 600 ended 0.2% lower while regional bourses mixed. The French benchmark was the worst performer, falling 0.6%. Basic resource sector rose 1.8%, as copper prices reached a 15-month-high, and crude prices reached a three week-high, driving the energy sector to rise 1.5%.

Anglo American surged by 4.7% following Endiama

Bid for a Minority

De Beers, the diamond mining unit of De Beers.

Defense stocks rose between 3% to 8%, including Rheinmetall Hensoldt, and SAAB after U.S. president Donald Trump stated that he believes Ukraine can retake its occupied land by Russia, and that Kyiv must act immediately.

STOXX600 gains were held back by losses in luxury stocks like LVMH Hermes Richemont EssilorLuxottica. The subindex of luxury stocks fell 1.5%.

Healthcare stocks fell 0.6% with AstraZeneca, Roche and other heavyweights down by 2% and 0.4 respectively.

Bloomberg News reported on August 1 that Washington has formalized the lower auto tariffs.

Wall Street stocks fell as investors digested Powell's remarks which provided little clarity about the Fed's future interest rate policy.

According to the CME FedWatch Tool, traders are betting that there will be at least one rate cut in this year. The odds of a move in October topping 94%.

Last week, the Fed announced its first rate cut since 2025. This sparked a global rally that lifted European and U.S. stocks. But after a strong start to the year -- fueled by gains in defense stocks -- European shares have lost momentum, trailing their U.S. peers amid a relentless artificial-intelligence-driven rally that has pushed American benchmarks to record highs.

The Fed could become more dovish at the December meeting, because restrictive monetary policies can worsen employment and inflation upside risks are not materializing. Elias Haddad is a senior market strategist with Brown Brothers Harriman.

The STOXX 600 is about 2% below its peak in March, and has gained about 9.2% so far this year. The S&P 500 is up close to 13%.

Lanxess' stock fell 6.6% when Deutsche Bank lowered its rating from "buy" to "hold". The German business mood showed a surprising decline in September, as the economy remained weak.

(source: Reuters)