By Shashwat Chauhan, Jesus Calero and Shristi Achar A
(Reuters) -European shares closed marginally higher on Monday, with banks and technology stocks rebounding from losses last week after markets were startled by political uncertainty in France, while Danish insurer Topdanmark surged on Sampo’s buyout bid.
The pan-European closed up 0.1%, coming off its worst weekly percentage fall so far this year.
Banks advanced nearly 1% after tumbling more than 8% last week, among top boosts for the benchmark index, while technology stocks were next in line with a 0.6% gain, recovering from a nearly 2% drop last week.
The benchmark index, however, did hit a six-week low earlier in the session.
European markets have been under pressure after French President Emmanuel Macron called for a snap election following a trouncing of his ruling centrist party, with the campaigning kicking off on Monday.
“There is still little firm information about voting intentions and party/coalition platforms,” strategists at Societe Generale (OTC:) said in a note.
“Until there is more clarity, in particular regarding the different parties fiscal and spending plans, uncertainty is likely to linger.”
Most major bourses in the region rose on the day, with France’s benchmark climbing 0.9% after falling more than 6% last week.
On the flipside, healthcare led sectoral declines, falling almost 1%, while miners shed 0.7%, as most metals prices slipped after data showed top consumer China’s industrial output was weaker than expected in May.
Separately, Italian EU-harmonised consumer prices (HICP) rose 0.2% month-on-month in May and were also up 0.8% from a year earlier, confirming preliminary data.
Inflation data in the UK along with a broader euro zone reading are due later this week, which is also packed with interest rate decisions from central banks in Switzerland, Norway and the UK.
Meanwhile, Wall Street bank Citi’s global equity strategists cut European equities to “neutral” from “overweight”, citing increased political risks after France’s decision to call a snap parliamentary election.
Among individual stocks, Topdanmark jumped 22.2% after Finnish insurer Sampo agreed to buy its Danish rival in a deal that values the company at 33 billion crowns ($4.73 billion), the companies said. Sampo lost 1.2%.
Shares of ING, the largest Dutch lender by assets, gained 2.8% after the bank forecast total income growth of between 4% and 5% per year during 2024-2027.
Adidas (OTC:) fell 2.5% after the German sportswear brand said it was investigating allegations of corruption in China after receiving an anonymous letter.