12:16 PM ET Jan 17, 2006
LONDON (MarketWatch) -- European markets closed lower on Tuesday as oil
prices topped $65 a barrel and investors eyed losses in Japan and some
mixed corporate news.
Germany's DAX 30 eased 1% at 5,460, the French CAC 40 index lost 1% at
4,807, while the U.K.'s FTSE 100 index shed 0.7% at 5,699.
All three indexes gave up advances made on Monday, when U.S. markets were
closed for the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.
The losses also came after a dismal performance in Tokyo, where the Nikkei
225 lost over 400 points.
"The (U.K.) market's been very strong (but) there's been a bit of a wobble
with some weird things going on in Japan. I think that's why it's down a
bit..." noted Stuart Fowler, head of U.K. equities at Axa Investment
Management.
U.S. stocks opened lower Tuesday as surging crude-oil prices outweighed an
upbeat earnings forecast from McDonald's and news of a sweetened Boston
Scientific offer for medical-devices maker Guidant Corp.
The front-dated light sweet crude contract climbed back over $65 a barrel
mark amid concerns about the political situation in Iran, after the
country broke the seals on some of its nuclear research sites, and unrest
in Nigeria.
"(Oil) is an important import cost for a lot of companies," said Fowler.
"If the oil price is lower then an awful lot of companies report higher
profits, so it has made a bit of a difference (to sentiment)."
Decliners included brewer Heineken, which fell 1%, and advertising group
Publicis, which lost 0.9%.
Turning to corporate news, Tesco, Britain's biggest supermarket chain,
eased 1.8% after it said that U.K. comparable sales excluding fuel rose
5.7%, slightly outpacing consensus estimates.
Tesco said seasonal foods sold well over Christmas and also saw growth in
non-food sales, especially home entertainment, electronics, clothing, toys
and gifts. International sales rose 16.1%.
Also in the U.K. publisher Pearson added 2.5% after closing 2005 in line
with expectations, leading to "significant" underlying growth in sales,
adjusted earnings per share, free-cash flow and return on invested
capital.
It noted a strong performance in the school, higher education,
professional and international markets divisions of its education
business. Elsewhere, Penguin's fourth-quarter frontlist performed well;
the Financial Times sustained its advertising-revenue growth and will
reach breakeven; and IDC expects to report its best year ever, the company
said.
Meanwhile, Vivendi Universal lost 0.6% after the scaled-down French
media-and-telecommunications conglomerate said it plans to delist from the
New York Stock Exchange. It was also upgraded to buy from hold by ABN
Amro, who said "even in our base case, Vivendi's valuation looks
attractive."
Also, EADS shares were unchanged after its majority-held airplane unit
Airbus said orders in 2005 rose to 1,055, topping Boeing's 1,002 orders
for the year. It also delivered more planes that Boeing, at 378 planes
compared to Boeing's 290.
Brokers were busy, with Dutch bank ABN Amro and several insurance
companies coming under scrutiny.
ABN Amro shares added 0.2% after Credit Suisse First Boston upgraded it to
outperform from neutral as part of a review of the European banks sector.
Bear Stearns upgraded Swiss insurance company Zurich Financial Services to
peer perform from underperform saying that, while it has some longer-term
concerns about strategic positioning, it can see few clouds on the horizon
in 2006.
It also downgraded Sweden's Skandia Insurance to underperform from peer
perform, saying it believes the shares are overvalued by 9% at current
levels on a stand-alone basis.
Skandia shares lost 0.4% while Zurich Financial gave up 1.2%.
Hotel and travel group Accor gained 3.2% in Paris after UBS said the
company is its top pick in the sector. The bank also raised its price
target.
This MarketWatch news update is provided to you courtesy of Thomson
Financial.
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