Renault (RNO)

Index:

CAC 40

  40.55
   
  • Change Today:
     0.00
  • 52 Week High:  53.98
  • 52 Week Low:  33.76
  • Currency: Euro
  • Shares Issued: 272.10m
  • Volume: 0
  • Market Cap:  11,034m
  • Beta: 0.99

Europe open: Stocks dip as investors mull conflicting views on coronavirus

By Alexander Bueso

Date: Friday 14 Feb 2020

LONDON (ShareCast) - (Sharecast News) - Stocks in Europe were trading a tad lower following a mixed start to the session as investors tried to understand what the spike in confirmed coronavirus cases the day before, due to a change in methodology by Chinese officials, really meant.
Following the latest update from the World Health Organisation and clarifications regarding those "changes", Drs Adam Barker and Tara Raveendran at ShoreCap said they did not alter the "underlying dynamics" of the contagion, which was slowing down.

Rather the opposite if anything, the change to a less specific method of confirming cases, known as computer tomography, was meant - and rightly so - as a way to cast the net wider in order not to miss any cases.

Be that as it may, in the background some researchers were warning of the risk of a much wider contagion globally, possibly in the billions.

Against that backdrop, as of 0907 GMT, the benchmark Stoxx 600 was trading 0.16% lower to 430.35, alongside a 0.11% dip on the German Dax to 13,731.21 and a 0.14% fall for the FTSE Mibtel to 24,854.60.

Also weighing on investor sentiment, on Thursday evening the US central bank slightly reduced its plans for buying Treasury bills and for conducting overnight repurchase operations.

French energy group EdF was at the top of the leaderboard for the Stoxx 600 after posting a more than four-fold increase in full-year net income attributable to the group of €5.2bn, with reported recurring net income of €3.9bn (consensus: €2.4bn).

The company's guidance for full-year 2020 operating profits of €17.5-18.0bn was also ahead of analysts' estimates.

Renault was among the worst performers after the carmaker posted a nearly 30% decline in group operating income.

On the economic side of things, German gross domestic product figures for the last three months of 2019 fell short of forecasts, but some economists were not overly worried.

According to the country's ministry of finance, GDP was flat quarter-on-quarter (consensus: 0.1%), weighed down by slower spending by households and the public sector.

But Berenberg's Holger Schmieding advised clients to take the latest readings with a "pinch of salt".

"Solid gains in real disposable incomes and still elevated levels of consumer confidence suggest that the data will either be revised up for late 2019 or show a significant snapback for early 2020," he said.

"Also, Germany looks set to step up its slow-motion fiscal stimulus from c0.3% of GDP in 2019 to c0.4% this year as the supply constraints holding back public investment growth are easing."





Email this article to a friend

or share it with one of these popular networks:


Note 1: Prices and trades are provided by Digital Look Corporate Solutions and are delayed by at least 15 minutes.

 

Renault Market Data

Currency Euro
Share Price   40.55
Change Today   0.00
% Change 0.00 %
52 Week High  53.98
52 Week Low  33.76
Volume 0
Shares Issued 272.10m
Market Cap  11,034m
Beta 0.99

What The Brokers Say

Strong Buy 6
Buy 10
Neutral 5
Sell 0
Strong Sell 0
Total 21
buy
Broker recommendations should not be taken as investment advice, and are provided by the authorised brokers listed on this page.

Trades for --2024

Time Volume / Share Price
0 @  0.00

Top of Page