LIVE MARKETS-Will Value stocks ever stage a comeback?
* European shares rise to fresh day high
* STOXX set for worst week in 3 months
* OPEC said to reach output deal, oil stocks rally
* French, German surveys dispel slowdown fears
June 22 - Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to
you by Reuters stocks reporters and anchored today by Helen Reid. Reach her on Messenger to
share your thoughts on market moves: helen.reid.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net
WILL VALUE STOCKS EVER STAGE A COMEBACK? (1250 GMT)
As European economic data has suffered, investors have turned to parts of the market they
see as most likely to lock in sales growth despite a broadly unsupportive environment.
This has sent European Growth stocks' valuations surging. They're now on high premiums -
often higher than at the worst point of the sovereign crisis, according to Goldman Sachs.
What could shift the balance over to Value again?
GS' Sharon Bell and team think this requires three ingredients:
- an improvement in economic data
- a rising equity market (we're currently down 1.3 percent year to date)
- rising core bond yields
In the UK it's a similar story. "Unless economic growth turns sharply, we do not expect
Value to outperform medium term, despite its higher-than-average discount," writes Bell.
Within Growth GS prefers Technology and digital companies, while their preferred Value plays
include autos, utilities, oil and gas and basic resources.
Globally too Growth stocks have outperformed Value a record level, which has led to much
chin-scratching from analysts (and hand-wringing from Value-focused investors).
Over at Bernstein they reckon the massive outperformance is in part due to the stellar rise
of Tech - "Value's largest short". In contrast with Goldman, however, they see an opportunity
for Value from "mean reversion of valuation spreads" - though they admit there's no clear
trigger for that at the moment.
(Helen Reid)
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OPEC DEAL POWERS UP STOCKS (1230 GMT)
Headlines about an OPEC deal on output have livened up the trading session, boosting crude
oil prices and sending Europe's oil and gas stocks index surging more than 2 percent.
That in turn has given a lift to the whole market with the STOXX 600 now trading at fresh
day highs, up almost 1 percent.
Full details are still lacking but the market reaction would imply that the output lift is
smaller than some had expected.
What we know from an OPEC source is that the cartel has agreed to raise oil production by
around 1 million barrels per day from July for the group and its allies.
The output gain is nominal but what really matters is the real change, as Reuters analyst
John Kemp explains.
Here's your oil & gas stocks chart:
(Danilo Masoni)
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A GERMAN CURE TO AN ITALIAN HANGOVER (1152 GMT)
Italian equities have been world-wide outperformers for over a year but the party ended
abruptly mid-May when investors suddenly realised that a populist government might not be such a
good thing after all.
Now, according to SocGen analysts, the hangover might drag on and for the worst if Moody's
decides to take a negative view on the Italian sovereign debt.
"We think a downgrade is highly probable by the next review date on 7 September, which could
potentially trigger some downgrades for Italian corporates", SocGen - who is underweight on
Italy - writes, noting that a majority of FTSE MIB's constituents are rated BBB.
One way to hedge Italy is to invest in German equities.
"Political turmoil in Italy has been putting pressure on the euro, down by 6% since April
2018, a strong support for the DAX which is full of exporters", SocGen's note reads.
Here's a SocGen chart which shows how the Italian FTSE MIB companies have a way weaker
credit rating than their European peers.
And to illustrate the rise and fall of Milan versus the rest of the world, here's how the
FTSE MIB did against the mighty Nasdaq since December 2016.
(Julien Ponthus)
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TURNING BEARISH ON EURO ZONE STOCKS (1037 GMT)
Even though the dollar has been on a strong run recently, Credit Suisse Wealth Management
sees currency headwinds ahead for euro zone stocks and thus it has downgraded its stance.
"We remain confident in our Eurozone growth forecasts and see two interest rate hikes by the
ECB in 2019. As such, we believe EUR/USD has upside potential," they say.
"But with a stronger currency, Eurozone equities – already quite expensive versus the US –
will likely encounter headwinds over the next 3–6 months, so we move our view to underperform
accordingly," they add.
And macro headlines today appear to support this view, as the euro climbed after stronger
than expected French business activity in June raised hopes that concerns about a widening
slowdown in the eurozone in the second quarter may be slightly overdone.
(Danilo Masoni)
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OPENING SNAPSHOT: STOXX BOUNCES BUT SET FOR WORST WEEK IN 3 MONTHS (0728 GMT)
European shares are rebounding but the STOXX 600 benchmark is firmly on track for
its worst week in three months as trade war worries and political jitters take their toll. In
early trading the pan-European benchmark was up 0.2 percent, still down 2 percent on the week.
The bounce is broad-based but moves across sectors and single stocks are rather muted.
Banks are the biggest gainers, up 0.6 percent and led higher by BPER after insurer
Unipol raised its stake in the Italian lender, while the sell-off in
autos - hammered yesterday by a trade-related profit warning at Daimler - looks to be
filling out with their sectoral index down around 0.1 percent to lead fallers in Europe.
(Danilo Masoni)
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WHAT'S ON THE RADAR BEFORE THE OPEN (0646 GMT)
On a quiet end to the week for corporate news European benchmarks were set for a modest gain
with energy shares likely to support the market as crude prices rise ahead of a highly uncertain
OPEC meeting in Vienna.
The STOXX 600 and its euro zone counterpart were set for their biggest weekly loss in three
months, however, as the realities of rising global protectionism sink in for investors who had
been relatively nonchalant before this week.
The impact of trade war was concentrated in a few key sectors like autos and industrials,
and the pan-European autos sector index was eyeing its worst week since the selloff at the start
of January 2016 as a result.
PMIs for France (0700 GMT), Germany (0730 GMT) and the euro area (0800 GMT) will be a focus
for investors seeking further evidence to shore up the thesis that the euro zone’s weak economic
performance in the winter was merely a transient soft patch.
There's little news on the corporate front but energy stocks are likely to be key drivers as
crude prices rally on uncertainty over what producer cartel OPEC will decide at its meeting
later in Vienna – though the actual outcome may only become clear after market hours. CME Group
said there was more uncertainty about this meeting than any of the previous four.
News that the 35 largest U.S. banks cleared the first stage of the Fed’s annual stress test
could boost financials stocks. The U.S. subsidiaries of Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse and UBS
publicly released their results for the first time and easily met all the minimum capital
requirements.
Here are some more headlines to watch:
Credit Suisse prevails in lawsuit seeking $300 mln for brokers -U.S. judge
Britain might not play fair with Brexit - Deutsche Boerse chief
SAP aims to double CRM business in two years - sales chief
Italy's Unipol buying further 5.2 pct of BPER, could buy more
Greek utility Public Power gets 6 expressions of interest for coal-fired units
BP seeks to lease LNG tanker for at least 9 months as day-rates rise
Paris ends Autolib electric car sharing contract with Bollore
Largest banks clear U.S. Fed's toughest annual stress tests
(Helen Reid)
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FUTURES POINT UP AS PMIS AWAITED (0607 GMT)
Futures for the main European benchmarks have opened higher, pointing to a small bounce at
the open.
PMIs will also be a focus today, giving a read on how transient the euro zone's winter "soft
patch" actually was.
Euro area figures are out at 0800 GMT, French numbers at 0700 GMT and German PMIs at 0730
GMT. Societe Generale analysts say they expect some stabilisation in the figures for June. "Any
further weakness in the PMIs would put our Q2 euro area GDP forecast of 0.7% quarter-on-quarter
at risk," they write.
Here are some headlines to keep on your radars for the open:
Deutsche Telekom's T-Systems to cut 10,000 jobs - CEO
Airbus says no-deal Brexit would force it to reconsider UK presence
JSW Steel plans bid for ArcelorMittal's Romanian plant
German carmakers join American farmers on front line of U.S.-China trade war
(Helen Reid)
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MORNING CALL: AN END-OF-WEEK BOUNCE, OPEC IN FOCUS (0535 GMT)
European shares are called modestly up at the end of a tumultuous week in which the reality
of higher trade tariffs has suddenly fully sunk in for investors.
The STOXX 600 is on track for its biggest weekly loss in three months.
Overnight Asian shares slid to their lowest in six months on signs U.S. trade battles with
China and many other countries are starting to chip away at corporate profits.
Oil markets are very much the focus today ahead of an OPEC meeting later in Vienna. The
outcome may not become clear until after market hours, and crude prices have been rallying on
uncertainty over whether the cartel will manage to agree a production increase.
Strong crude prices will likely help support energy stocks today, while it'll be interesting
to keep a watch on autos as they might well stay under pressure from tariff fears. The autos
sector is on track for its worst week since January 2016.
Spreadbetters call the FTSE 100 up 14 points at 7,570 the DAX 23 points higher at 12,535
and the CAC 40 13 points higher at 5,329.
(Helen Reid)
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(Reporting by Danilo Masoni, Helen Reid, Kit Rees and Julien Ponthus)