By Sruthi Shankar
(Reuters) – European shares hit a two-week high on Thursday, supported by a handful of strong earnings reports, more stimulus for Britain’s economy and a surge in Wall Street stock futures, as Democrat Joe Biden moved closer to victory in the U.S. presidential race.
In its fifth day of gains, the pan-European STOXX 600 index <.stoxx> rose 0.6% to hit its highest level since Oct. 20, with technology stocks <.sx8p> once again leading the way.
Dialog Semiconductor
French lender Societe Generale
Meanwhile, U.S. futures jumped over 1%, as Biden held narrow leads in Nevada and Arizona, while Republican President Donald Trump was watching his slim advantage fade in must-win states Pennsylvania and Georgia as mail-in and absentee votes were being counted.
Tech stocks looked set to outperform, as the likelihood of a gridlock in U.S. Congress made investors optimistic that tighter regulation and higher corporate taxes on American firms might be hard to enact. [MKTS/GLOB]
Chris Bailey, European strategist at Raymond James in London, said it was a combination of the election and COVID-19 trade coming together.
“The election trade is that there isn’t a ‘blue sweep’. Those conditions where you would’ve perhaps favoured reflation – rising bond yields which would’ve supported value stocks – switched away a bit,” Bailey said.
“We’re now back to favouring COVID-19 trade, which is obviously beneficiaries of work-from-home and lower bond yields.”
Defensive utilities <.sx6p> rose 1.4%, but banks <.sx7p> fell 1.0%, coming under pressure after Dutch bank ING Groep NV
Germany’s Commerzbank
Munich-based broadcaster ProSiebenSat.1 Media
UK’s FTSE <.ftse> was flat, with sterling on the rise after the Bank of England increased its already huge bond-buying stimulus by a bigger-than-expected 150 billion pounds ($195 billion). [.L]
(Reporting by Sruthi Shankar in Bengaluru; editing by Uttaresh.V and Anil D’Silva)