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European shares trudge higher as stimulus wave stems selloff

Published 03/24/2020, 04:25 AM
Updated 03/24/2020, 07:26 AM
© Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt
UK100
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DE40
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ES35
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IT40
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BIOX
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STOXX
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SXIP
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SXPP
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SXTP
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V2TX
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By Sagarika Jaisinghani

(Reuters) - European shares attempted another rebound on Tuesday as a fresh wave of monetary and fiscal stimulus halted a global selloff in equity markets, but growing evidence of the economic damage from the coronavirus pandemic kept investors on edge.

In a co-ordinated global effort to stabilize financial markets in one of the biggest routs on record, Germany launched a stimulus package of up to 750 billion euros, while the U.S. Federal Reserve took unprecedented steps to shore up credit across the economy.

All the major country indexes rose in early trading, with Germany's DAX (GDAXI), Spain's IBEX (IBEX) and London's FTSE 100 (FTSE) adding between 3.5% and 5.2%. The pan-European STOXX 600 index jumped 4.2% and was set for its best day since August 2015.

"It is probably just a natural reaction to the extent of the losses in the last few sessions rather than any one thing," said Connor Campbell, analyst at spread better Spreadex in London.

"There's always a caveat attached to the morning part of the European session because the U.S. session can change things so much that often the afternoon can be unrecognizable from the morning."

After see-sawing about 3% to 4% in both directions last week, the benchmark European index is still down more than 30% since its record high last month in one of the fastest-ever turns to a bear market.

With entire nations under lockdown foreshadowing more pain for factory activity and business confidence in the second quarter, investors have largely ignored macroeconomic data from the first quarter.

On Tuesday, traders hardly reacted to figures showing euro zone business activity crumbling in March as shops, restaurants and offices pulled down the shutters.

"If the global economy is a tin bucket filled with water, the coronavirus outbreak has drilled multiple holes into it and monetary policy bazookas are unable to stop the water from leaking away," said Lukman Otunuga, senior research analyst at FXTM.

"The solution may have to be a new bucket, which in this instance is a cure to the coronavirus."

Italian stocks (FTMIB) surged 5.7%, as latest numbers showing a slowdown in new cases of COVID-19 raised hopes that the most aggressive phase of the outbreak may be passing.

Travel and leisure stocks (SXTP), which have posted some of the heaviest losses this month, rose 3.4%, while miners (SXPP), insurers (SXIP) and oil and gas stocks <.SEXP> jumped between 7% and 10%.

France's Biomérieux (PA:BIOX) was up 8.6% after the healthcare company won approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for its product aimed at testing for coronavirus.

© Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt

Europe's fear gauge (V2TX) fell to 55.57, its lowest in nearly two weeks.

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