In This Article:
The Majors
It was a mixed week for the European majors. The DAX30 rose by 0.97% to lead the way, with the EuroStoxx600 up by just 0.06%. It was a bearish end to the week for the CAC40, however, which fell by 0.65% on Friday to end the week down by 0.52%. The DAX30 and EuroStoxx600 saw more modest losses of 0.17% and 0.32% on Friday to stay in the green for the week.
It was another bearish start to the week for the European majors, with geopolitical risk weighing.
While progress had been made in the U.S – China trade talks, the lack of an actual agreement and continuation of tariffs weighed on Monday.
It was upwards from there, however, with positive progress on Brexit and U.S corporate earnings providing support mid-week.
In the latter part of the week, the majors ran out of steam, however, with concerns over Parliament voting through the deal pinning back the majors.
Economic data played second fiddle to geopolitics through the week, with the Eurozone’s economic data on the lighter side.
From outside of the Eurozone, economic data from China also tested the majors.
Economic growth in China slowed to 6.0% in the 3rd quarter, year-on-year, with the economy growing by 1.5% in the quarter. It was the slowest growth in 17-years.
The Stats
It was a relatively quiet week on the Eurozone economic calendar.
On Monday, the Eurozone’s industrial production figures were positive, with production rising by 0.4% in August, month-on-month. Production had fallen by 0.4% in July.
Tuesday was a more negative day on the data front, however. While coming in ahead of forecasts, economic sentiment waned in Germany and the Eurozone in October.
Concerns over Brexit and the U.S – China trade war weighed on consumer sentiment at the start of the 4th quarter.
On Wednesday, the Eurozone’s trade data continued to reflect the ongoing effects of the U.S – China trade war.
The trade surplus narrowed beyond expectations. In spite of the negative numbers, the majors managed to find more gains supported by Brexit chatter.
Finalized September inflation figures for France, Italy and the Eurozone had a muted impact on the majors.
The Market Movers
From the DAX, it was another bullish week for the auto sector. Volkswagen led the way once more, rallying by 4.91%. BMW and Daimler also saw solid gains, rising by 4.62% and 3.53% respectively. Continental trailed the pack, however, gaining 1.93%.
It was also bullish for the banking sector. Deutsche Bank gained 4.42%, with Commerzbank up by 2.71%.
Concerns over the economic outlook weighed on the banking sector at the end of the week. A 1.12% loss for Commerzbank on Friday limited the upside for the week.