European stocks close down ahead of US jobs data


(MENAFN- AFP) Europe's main stock markets closed lower on Thursday, on the eve of US jobs data that could cement expectations of a Fed rate rise next month.

London's benchmark FTSE 100 index slipped 0.08 percent to 6,747.09 points after the Bank of England decided to keep its main interest rate at 0.50 percent earlier in the day.

In the eurozone, Frankfurt's DAX 30 ended the day 0.44 percent lower at 11,585.10 points, while the CAC 40 in Paris dipped 0.09 percent to 5,192.11.

"As the camp expecting a rates rise in the coming months from both US and UK central bankers gains support, investors will be paying close attention to macroeconomic data releases," said Kash Kamal, senior analyst at Sucden Financial Research.

Europe's leading stock markets had closed higher on Wednesday.

On Thursday the euro slipped to $1.0881 from $1.0904 late in New York on Wednesday.

The pound fell back to $1.5520 compared with $1.5603 Wednesday, with investors reacting to news that British industrial production fell in June by 0.4 percent.

"June's industrial production figures highlight that the strong pound and weak overseas demand held back the manufacturing sector's recovery in the second quarter," said Paul Hollingsworth, UK Economist at Capital Economics research group.

Positive US data has meanwhile strengthened the case for an interest rate hike from the Federal Reserve as early as next month.

US stocks finished mostly higher Wednesday, but a disappointing earnings report from Disney weighed on the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

The data was offset however by a separate release Wednesday from the Institute for Supply Management, which said the US service sector expanded 4.3 percent in July to a record high.

On Thursday Wall Street opened little changed, as big declines in 21st Century Fox, Tesla Motors and some other companies following earnings reports halted the market's advance.

Five minutes into trade, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was 0.03 percent down at 17,535.46 points.

The broad-based S&P 500 added 0.04 percent at 2,100.78, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index shed 0.02 percent at 5,138.90.

- 'Big daddy of jobs' -

Traders are now focusing on Friday's official US employment figures, after payroll firm ADP estimated that the private sector in the world's biggest economy added 185,000 jobs in July, much below the analyst estimates.

"Wednesday afternoon's data was particularly mixed, with a big miss in ADP non-farm joined by an 11-year high ISM non-manufacturing PMI. Comments, be them from hawk or dove, about the likelihood of September lift-off versus a December start are premature since the big daddy of the jobs data world doesn't arrive until tomorrow," said Spreadex analyst Connor Campbell.

Back in Europe, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras on Wednesday said his government is nearing a deal with international creditors on a mammoth bailout, as his spokeswoman raised the prospect of early elections in the fall .

Greece's main stocks index was 2.76 percent higher at 660.96 points in trading on Thursday, after dropping nearly 20 percent in value since the start of the week.

The Athens market reopened on Monday, five weeks after the government imposed capital controls to prevent a bank run and stave off financial collapse at the height of its standoff with EU-IMF creditors over a new bailout.

The ATHEX gain, if it holds, would be the first since the record 16 percent plunge at the start of the volatile trading week.

Germany is meanwhile growing increasingly dubious that a deal on a third bailout for Greece can be sealed this month, the daily Bild reported Thursday citing a government source.

With just two weeks to go until an August 20 deadline, when Greece needs money from a new bailout to repay some 3.4 billion euros ($3.7 billion) due to the European Central Bank, the unnamed official told Bild: "It can't be done."

Asian stocks ended mixed Thursday, with most markets taking a hit after the patchy US economic data fed economic uncertainty while Tokyo got a boost from a weaker yen.

Tokyo finished 0.24 percent higher, while Seoul lost 0.81 percent, Shanghai dropped 0.89 percent and Sydney shed 1.13 percent.


AFP

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