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Europe Shares Steady; Investors Eye US-Iran Talks, Cenbanks

  • Intertek drops after rejecting revised takeover bid
  • Nordex advances on strong quarterly earnings
  • German consumer sentiment at a 3-year low - survey

April 27 (Reuters) - European shares were muted on Monday, as investors ​prepared for a week packed with central bank meetings, while oil prices rose with ‌U.S.-Iran peace talks stalling again.

U.S. President Donald Trump cancelled a trip by his envoys to Pakistan over the weekend for scheduled talks with Iran. Trump has said Iran could telephone if it wants to negotiate an end to their two-month war, but ​added that Tehran cannot have a nuclear weapon.

Investors, however, took notice of an Axios report that ​said Iran proposed reopening the Strait of Hormuz, while postponing nuclear negotiations.

The pan-European STOXX ⁠600 was flat at 610.36 points as of 0826 GMT. The index snapped a four-week streak of ​gains last week, ending 2.5% lower.

Major regional bourses moved higher with Germany's DAX and Spain's IBEX 35 ​adding about 0.3% each.

With technology-led moves aiding U.S. stocks to all-time highs, energy-dependent Europe has lagged with several companies flagging the impact of the Iran war on earnings.

"It is a possibility that we continue to see the (STOXX)600 index diverge negatively ​from the technology-heavy U.S. names in the coming days due to the weakening economic outlook in Europe," ​said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior market analyst at Swissquote Bank.

"The economic implications of the higher energy prices and the lower ‌growth expectations ⁠globally, I think, will be a bigger drive for the European stocks than they will be across the Atlantic Ocean."

Technology and consumer staples shares weighed on the pan-European index, down 0.6% and 0.7%, respectively, on Monday.

UK's Intertek dropped 3.3% after the product-testing firm rejected a revised takeover bid of 54 pounds per share ​from Swedish private equity ​group EQT AB on ⁠Friday.

The oil and gas index led the gains on the benchmark, jumping 8% as oil prices rose.

With elevated oil prices adding to expectations that inflation may rise, ​markets will pay close attention to policy meetings at the European Central Bank ​and the ⁠Bank of England this week for any signs the central banks could move to hike rates.

German consumer sentiment was at a three-year low with higher energy prices and rising inflation weighing on households, a survey showed.

Among other ⁠movers, ​Nordex shares advanced 11.8% after the German onshore wind turbine maker ​posted core earnings and sales above expectations.

French auto parts supplier Forvia dipped 2.8% with the firm to sell its car interiors business ​to Apollo Funds for 1.82 billion euros ($2.13 billion).

Reporting by Twesha Dikshit; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala and Harikrishnan Nair

Source: Reuters


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