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A television news crew sets up their camera equipment outside the Volkswagen headquarters in Wolfsburg. Volkswagen rebounded by 5.19% to €111.50 on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, with investors apparently feeling CEO Martin Winterkorn’s resignation may help the company turn a corner on the emissions scam scandal.
AFP
London
Europe’s main stock markets closed higher yesterday, recovering some of the previous session’s sharp losses as investors reacted positively to eurozone growth data.
London’s benchmark FTSE 100 index finished 1.62% ahead at 6,032.24 points in the capital, while the Paris CAC 40 closed 0.10% up at 4,432.83 compared with Tuesday’s close.
Frankfurt’s DAX 30 ended 0.44% higher at 9,612.62 points, lifted in part by a surge in scandal-battered Volkswagen’s share price as group CEO Martin Winterkorn announced his resignation.
European indices had tumbled Tuesday, dragged down by sharp losses to share prices of carmakers and miners on the Volkswagen pollution fraud scandal and a bleak outlook for China’s economy, dealers said.
Traders appeared to mute those concerns long enough for yesterday’s rebound.
“Ironically, gains are despite disappointing Chinese manufacturing PMI data overnight which only adds to pre-existing concerns about the world’s number two economy, but suggests markets are becoming increasingly accustomed to China data confirming a slower pace of economic growth,” said Mike van Dulken, head of research at traders Accendo Markets.
Investors were more actively encouraged by continued signs of growth in the eurozone economy.
Despite a slight dip in September, the eurozone still managed to expand at its fastest quarterly rate in four years, a key business survey showed yesterday. Data company Markit said the flash reading of its eurozone Purchasing Managers Index fell to 53.9 points in September from 54.3 points in August.
The readings “pointed to steady growth of the eurozone economy at the end of the third quarter”, Markit said.
The euro rose to $1.1163 from $1.1132 late in New York on Tuesday, as markets followed comments by European Central Bank president Mario Draghi about the ECB’s readiness to adapt its policies to kindle growth.
On the corporate front, shares in auto giant Volkswagen rebounded by 5.19% to €111.50 on the Frankfurt stock exchange, with investors apparently feeling CEO Winterkorn’s resignation may help the company turn a corner on the emissions scam scandal that has battered its stock prices. Volkswagen lost 35% — or €25bn ($28bn) — off the company’s market value on Monday and Tuesday alone.
US stocks initially followed Europe’s positive lead at the open before heading downward on China concerns.
In early afternoon Wall Street trade, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.61% at 16,320.62 points.
The broad-based S&P 500 slid 1.23% to 1,942.74, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index slipped 0.27% to 4,743.69.
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