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LIVE MARKETS-On our radar: tech and trade, Pfeiffer Vacuum and Merlin

May 23 - Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to

you by Reuters stocks reporters and anchored today by Josephine Mason. Reach her on Messenger to

share your thoughts on market moves: josephine.mason.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net

ON OUR RADAR: TECH AND TRADE, PFEIFFER VACUUM AND MERLIN (0658 GMT)

European stock futures are pointing to heavy losses at the open as worries about a

protracted, complex dispute between Beijing and Washington forces investors out of risky assets.

The trade-sensitive DAX is down the most, while FTSE 100 is off 0.6% as concerns about

damage to the economy from the deepening political crisis and trade tensions offset the benefit

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of the weaker sterling on its multinational constituents.

The growing list of companies complying with the U.S. blockade of Huawei is likely adding to

concerns about the impact on tech supply chains.

Aside from a slew of ex-divs that will keep stocks under pressure from Imperial Brands to

Daimler and Commerzbank, there's some earnings and dealmaking to drive individual moves.

Pfeiffer Vacuum shares are down 5% in pre-market trading after the industrial vacuum firm

gave a weak full-year guidance for sales and margin and Tate & Lyle is seen falling after

reporting lower FY profits and forecasting flat growth for 2020.

Shares in Merlin Entertainments, the owner of Madame Tussauds, are expected to get a boost

after activist investor ValueAct urged the company to go private, and WPP is seen higher after

private equity fund Vista Equity emerged as one of four U.S. bidders vying for a majority stake

in its data analytics firm Kantar.

(Josephine Mason)

*****

MAY DAY FOR MARKETS? (0636 GMT)

Our earlier blog highlighted UK Prime Theresa May's troubles, but if futures are anything to

go by, it looks like stocks are in for a tough session as investors continue to shun risky

assets rattled by the rising tensions between China and the U.S. All the major European stock

futures are down 0.7-0.8%.

One dealer said growing tensions between the U.S. and Iran are adding to the risk-off

sentiment.

But the trade spat is ever present in investors' minds, with the possible blockade of two

companies - Huawei and Hikvision - raising worries that Trump is targeting China's tech

ambitions, leading to a much more complicated and protracted spat with China than one centred on

securing a trade deal.

The list of companies severing ties with Huawei is growing as companies aim to comply with

the U.S. blockade of the company, hurting the world's No.2 smartphone maker: British chip

designer ARM owned by SoftBank and Panasonic overnight.

In upbeat news that may get overshadowed by macro issues, China's Lenovo Group, the world's

top personal computer maker, has reported better-than-expected profits, a sign of decent demand

in the world's No. 2 economy.

Otherwise it's relatively quiet on the corporate front except for the UK - there's a slew of

ex-divs today which will also pressure heavyweight stocks from Imperial Brands to Daimler and

Commerzbank in Germany.

UK early-years retailer Mothercare has delayed its full-year results by a day to Friday,

citing complexity due to UK and group restructuring, and United Utilities is the latest UK

utility to warn about the possibility of renationalisation.

BAT may be under pressure on news Brazil is suing the company Philip Morris, in a landmark

case aimed at recovering the public health treatment costs of tobacco-related diseases over the

last five years.

There's a bit of dealmaking: activist investor ValueAct is urging Merlin Entertainments, the

owner of Madame Tussauds, to go private, and private equity fund Vista Equity has emerged as one

of four U.S. bidders vying for a majority stake in WPP's data analytics firm Kantar. WPP's

U.S.-listed shares were higher overnight on the news.

Elsewhere, more positive signs that Italy's banks are making headway with their efforts to

get rid of their mountains of bad loans. UniCredit planning to sell up to $5.6 bln of soured

loans, according to a Bloomberg report and Intesa Sanpaolo plans to offload only up to 50% of a

10 billion euro portfolio of so-called "unlikely-to-pay" (UTP) loans.

Other headlines this morning:

Vista Equity Partners lines up binding bid for Kantar - sources

Deutsche Bank investors meet amid questions on strategy, leadership

ARM supply halt deals fresh blow to Chinese tech giant Huawei

Novartis has 25 blockbusters in the pipeline - CEO

Activist investor urges Madame Tussauds-owner Merlin to go private - FT

U.S. judge appoints Ken Feinberg mediator for Bayer Roundup settlement talks

AB InBev expects total investment of up to $400 mln in Nigerian brewery

In landmark case, Brazil sues top tobacco firms to recover public health costs

Judge rules against Trump, paves way for banks to provide his business records to Congress

Nestle and Fonterra mull sale of dairy joint venture in Brazil

Philip Green's Arcadia to close UK stores, review U.S. in restructuring

Intesa to sell up to 5 bln euros in UTP loans to Prelios-sources

(Josephine Mason)

*****

MAY DAY (0544 GMT)

Headline-watching over the U.S.-China trade spat are dominating most stock markets, but all

eyes may be on Number 10 again today as pressure on Theresa May to resign mounts and the Brexit

crisis deepens after the resignation last night of prominent Brexit supporter Andrea Leadsom

from the PM's government.

It's particularly galling for May as Britons head to the poll for the European elections,

where the ruling Conservative party are tipped for a big defeat.

Stocks sensitive to the UK economy and sterling like housebuilders, RBS and retailers, got

battered yesterday underscoring how quickly investors punished these sectors on big Brexit days,

although the dominant multi nationals helped lift the broader FTSE 100 index in positive

territory despite a brief wobble in the afternoon.

Sterling is under pressure this morning, lingering near 4-month lows hit yesterday,

but financial spreadbetters IG are calling the FTSE to open 27 points lower at 7,307, suggesting

worries about damage to the world's No. 5 economy as the political turmoil and the global trade

tensions continue may offset the falling pound.

Other European bourses are taking their cues from overnight Asia where stocks hit 4-month

lows on lingering trade concerns and the Fed minutes: Frankfurt's DAX is expected to open 62

points lower at 12,106 and Paris' CAC to open 21 points lower at 5,358, according to IG.

We've also got German, French and euro-zone flash PMI and Germany's investor/business Ifo

confidence indicator later in the morning for a glimpse into the health of the EZ economy.

"Investors will be paying close attention to the German manufacturing update seeing as it

has been in contraction territory throughout 2019 and the contraction is deepening. The decision

by President Trump to delay imposing tariffs on EU cars for up to six months should take some

pressure off the German car manufacturing sector," says David Madden, market analyst at CMC

Markets UK.

(Josephine Mason)

*****

(Reporting by Danilo Masoni, Helen Reid, Josephine Mason and Thyagaraju Adinarayan)