European STOCKS Rise

European STOCKS Rise, European stocks rose cautiously Tuesday, with some robust corporate earnings offsetting jitters surrounding the future of Greece’s economy.


The Stoxx Europe 600 index ended the session just over 0.5% higher, building on Monday’s gains, while Germany’s DAX 30 added 0.4%, France’s CAC 0.1% and London’s FTSE 100 just under 0.2%.

French advertising company Publicis Groupe SA was one of the strongest performing stocks across Europe with its share price gaining more than 5% at one point during the session, buoyed by the company reporting stronger than expected first-quarter revenue and guiding for more satisfactory growth in 2015.

Other upbeat earnings came from U.K.-listed broadcaster Sky PLC, Swedish telecom operator Tele2 AB, Dutch paint and chemicals maker Akzo Nobel NV and Europe’s biggest biotech company, Switzerland’s Actelion Ltd.
In currency markets, the euro recovered from some weakness earlier in the session to end the day marginally higher against the dollar at $1.075. Nonetheless, strategists voiced caution on the currency, saying that if the situation surrounding Greece fails, the euro could come under fresh pressure.On Monday, Greece’s government issued a decree requiring public bodies such as state-owned companies and public pension funds to transfer their cash reserves to the central bank as the country’s cash reserves continue to dry up.

Eurozone finance ministers are due to meet in Riga, Latvia, on Friday. However, a deal on fresh aid is unlikely to be agreed before the Eurogroup meeting on May 11, a day before Greece must pay €780 million ($838 million) due to the International Monetary Fund.

Since the start of the year, the euro has fallen close to 12% against the greenback, though this move has largely been driven by dollar strength as a result of expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve is paving the way for an interest-rate increase, while the European Central Bank continues to move in the opposite direction. Higher interest rates broadly make a country’s currency more attractive.

Much of the move this week, however, is being driven predominantly by Greece, strategists have said.

In debt markets Tuesday, yields on German government bonds, commonly considered one of the safest assets during times of volatility, continued to hover around record lows.

The yield on the country’s 10-year bond, or Bund, was under 0.074% at midday—a shade off its all-time low but fast approaching negative territory— before creeping higher later in the session. Bond yields fall as prices rise.

Gold, another asset commonly sought during times of stress rose 0.4% on the day to $1,198.10 per troy ounce, while Brent crude fell around 1.2% to $62.68 a barrel.
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