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Europe close: Stocks drift lower ahead of key data releases

By Alexander Bueso

Date: Wednesday 25 Jan 2023

Europe close: Stocks drift lower ahead of key data releases

(Sharecast News) - European shares slipped on Wednesday, despite data showing German business sentiment had improved, weighed down by soft corporate outlooks across the Pond even as investors waited on key data releases in the US scheduled for over the next two sessions.
Those reports included some of the final readings for inflation before the next US central bank policy announcement on 1 February.

The pan-regional Stoxx 600 index slipped 0.29% to 452.07, with stock markets across the Continent in the red. US stocks were lower too.

"Microsoft's results showed a better-than-expected performance for its cloud computing division Azure, showing that there is resilient demand from firms who want to make efficiencies and cost-savings," said Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Susannah Streeter.

"But overall revenue growth lower than expectations, companies and consumers are clearly belt tightening and Microsoft is cautious about the quarter ahead with sales momentum slowing."

The tech sector was also hit by news that the US Justice Department filed a lawsuit against Google, alleging the company violated anti-trust laws by abusing its monopoly in ad technology.

UK stocks drifted lower even after UK factory gate prices fell to 14.7% year on year, a nine-month low.

Business confidence in Germany, the euro area's largest economy, improved by as much as expected at the start of 2023, the results of a closely followed survey showed.

The IFO Institute's business confidence index rose from 88.6 points in December to 90.2 for January. That was exactly as forecast by economists and marked a seven-month high.

In equity news, easyJet shares jumped as the low-cost airline said it expected to beat annual profit expectations. Rivals Wizz Air, British Airways owner IAG, Ryanair and Lufthansa all flew higher on the news.

ASML gained after the supplier of equipment to chip makers reported better-than-expected earnings.

Germany defence firm Rheinmetall gave up early gains triggered by news that Berlin was set to approve the deployment of Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine in its fight against Russia.

Danish IT consultancy Netcompany shed more than 20% despite reporting higher revenue and earnings, as it warned of a challenging environment which it said would affect future growth and earnings.

French train maker Alstom slipped, despite posting an 8% rise in third-quarter sales, helped by better-than-expected in Europe.

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