Caution and negative signs in major European stock markets on Monday as investors braced for a barrage of corporate results this week and the US Federal Reserve’s decision to raise interest rates.
Its two-day monetary policy meeting Fed will conclude on Wednesday, with economists expecting a rate hike of 75 basis points. Last week, the European Central Bank opened its own hike cycle with a move to 50 basis points.
The ECB may have to agree a moderate recession in order to control inflationary pressures on pricesif it sees signs that inflation expectations are strongly rising, pointed out Robert Holzmannmember of the Bank’s Board of Directors, in an interview with the Austrian state broadcaster ORF.
“We hope that this will not become necessary,” Holzmann added. to note that the size of the rate hike in September will depend on developments in the economic outlook.
Market players “weigh” the impact of interest rate hikes in terms of ECB in economic output in the eurozone. ECB President Christine Lagarde has pledged that European central bankers will continue to raise interest rates until they achieve their goal of returning inflation close to the 2% target.
In the field of results, Ryanair announced that it showed a net profit for the first quarter of the year but they came in below estimates, adding that it had limited visibility for the second quarter and almost no visibility in the second half. The Dutch medical equipment company Philips, reported a higher-than-expected second-quarter profit drop, stating that supply shortages and lockdowns in China reduced sales. Vodafone Group announced that the its performance in the first quarter of fiscal year 2023 was in line with expectationsfollowing continued growth in Europe and Africa, while the Julius Baer Gruppe announced lower profits for the first half of 2022, mainly due to slowing customer activity and volatile markets.
Corporate results will be a key driver of financial markets this week, as a new round of announcements is expected, with UBS, Unilever, LVMH, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Daimler, Shell, Barclays, Nestle and Renault standing out.
In this climate, the pan-European index Stoxx 600 is down 0.35% at 424 points, with oil and gas shares the biggest losers, down 1.3%.
In the individual boards, the German DAX loses 0.45% to 13,195 units, the French CAC 40 the British one slips by 0.27% to 6,200 units FTSE 100 losing 0.34% to 7,250 points.
In the periphery, the Italian FTSE MIB and the Spanish registers losses of 0.35% at 21,140 points IBEX 35 down 0.15% to 8,040 points.
In the individual sharesVerbund gains 3.3% after Barclays upgraded its stock to “overweight”.
In contrast, Philips tumbled 9%, with the Dutch company downgrading its earnings outlook for the year and medium term.
They move downwards at the beginning of the week stock markets in the Asia-Pacific region as well with technology dragging markets into negative territory. The biggest losers in Hong Kong were Hang Seng Tech, down 2%.
Source: Capital

I am Sophia william, author of World Stock Market. I have a degree in journalism from the University of Missouri and I have worked as a reporter for several news websites. I have a passion for writing and informing people about the latest news and events happening in the world. I strive to be accurate and unbiased in my reporting, and I hope to provide readers with valuable information that they can use to make informed decisions.