European shares slip as macro gloom weighs; luxury stocks rebound

Reuters

Published May 25, 2023 08:16

Updated May 25, 2023 17:39

By Sruthi Shankar and Ankika Biswas

(Reuters) -European stocks slipped on Thursday as concerns over the U.S. debt ceiling standoff and a global economic slowdown resurfaced and outweighed initial optimism from upbeat corporate earnings, while luxury stocks stabilized after a bruising selloff.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index closed 0.3% lower, shedding about 2.7% in three consecutive days, knocked down by recent losses in luxury stocks and lack of progress in talks to raise the U.S. debt ceiling and avert a default.

A media report said that U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy does not know if congressional and White House negotiators will be able to reach a deal on raising the debt limit on Thursday, renewing fears of an unprecedented default in the United States.

"The U.S. debt ceiling is headline at the moment - the uncertainty that it is bringing to the markets is incredibly difficult to navigate," said Helen Jewell, deputy chief investment officer at BlackRock (NYSE:BLK) Fundamental Equities for EMEA.

European stocks came under strong selling pressure this week as investors fretted over a potential U.S. debt default and sticky inflation in the UK, after a strong earnings season had boosted several regional bourses to record highs.

Weighing the most were declines in energy stocks on a slide in crude oil prices, while luxury majors took a breather and helped stave off steeper losses on the STOXX 600. [O/R]

"Luxury stocks can weather a recession, because high net worth individuals tend to purchase these ... so if the stocks see a deeper dip, I would see that as a potential value buy," said Giles Coghlan, chief market analyst at HYCM.

Further, technology was the top performing sector on a boost from European chipmakers after the world's most valuable chipmaker Nvidia Corp forecast quarterly revenue more than 50% above estimates, and said it is boosting supply to meet surging demand for its artificial-intelligence chips.

Shares of BE Semiconductor jumped 7.6%, while ASM International rose 8.6% and ASML Holdings added 5%. Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) analysts see both ASM and ASML as beneficiaries of growing AI adoption.

Germany's DAX slipped 0.3% after data showed Europe's biggest economy contracted in the first quarter of 2023, compared with the previous three months, thereby signalling a recession.