Europe midday: Shares extend losses on bond yield, inflationary fears

by | Feb 26, 2021

European shares extended losses at midday on Friday as rising bond yields and fears of higher interest rates sent investors running for cover.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 index was down 1.17%, marking a 1.92% fall over the last five days. All major regional bourses were lower. Wall Street stocks finished in negative territory on Thursday, with the Dow Jones easing off highs after registering another record close.

Rising rates were again in focus after the US 10-year Treasury yield rose above 1.5% to end the day at 1.52%, with fears that higher rates could spur investors to rotate out of stocks and into bonds persisting.

“You could argue there is a communication problem, or you could simply call it tantrum. Actually, it’s a global phenomenon as investors across the world sell rates in the expectation of a strong economic rebound and higher inflation,” said Markets.com analyst Neil Wilson.

“Markets are now starting to price for rate hikes far sooner than the Fed is indicating it will act. It’s not that rates are particularly high, it’s more the pace of the move taking frothy equity markets off guard. ”

“Valuations are stretched, so richly valued stocks are easily moved by these kinds of gyrations in the bond market. Whilst investors had been reasonably comfortable with a rising tide for rates, this sudden lurch higher requires repricing.”

Commodity prices were also off highs, hitting miners such as BHP and Anglo American.

Shares in Belgian telecoms group Proximus fell 9% as the company on Friday said it expected lower core profit for 2021 on the back of anticipated additional spending on fibre migrations and IT transformation, and less savings from Covid-19 measures.

French information tech group Sopra Steria fell after the company said the Covid‑19 pandemic and October 2020 cyberattack had a negative impact on business activity estimated at around 10 points of growth.

Net annual profit fell to 106.8m from 160.3m in 2019.

Shares in embattled German leasing firm Grenke led the gainers, up 14.46% after the company said it would have to restate its 2019 results in response to a special audit ordered by regulators.

The probe by Audit firm Mazars, commissioned by German financial regulator BaFin last year, revealed flawed accounting, poor compliance, undisclosed related-party transactions and questionable lending by Grenke’s in-house bank.

Related articles

Europe midday: Shares slip into red on Middle East tensions

Europe midday: Shares slip into red on Middle East tensions

(Sharecast News) - European shares fell into the red on Wednesday as Middle East tensions were ratcheted up after the assassination of the Hamas deputy leader Saleh al-Arouni in Lebanon, raising fears of retaliation by the Islamic group Hezbollah against Israel. The...

Europe open: Shares edge ahead as Middle East tensions weigh

Europe open: Shares edge ahead as Middle East tensions weigh

(Sharecast News) - European shares edged ahead in a cautious start to trade on Wednesday as Middle East tensions were ratcheted up after the assassination of the Hamas deputy leader Saleh al-Arouni in Lebanon, raising fears of retaliation by the Islamic group...

Trending stories

Join our mailing list

Subscribe to our mailing list to receive regular updates!

x