European markets closed lower on Wednesday, with major bourses mixed and most sectors in negative territory.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 provisionally ended down around 0.3% as tech stocks led the losses.
— Sam Meredith
U.S. stocks opened lower Wednesday as investors looked ahead to a key inflation report expected later this week.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.5% in early deals, while the S&P 500 dipped 0.3%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq was also 0.6% lower.
— Karen Gilchrist
Are we in a market bubble after recent global highs? Bob Parker, senior advisor International Capital Markets Association, weighs in.
Puma share price.
Puma shares were 2.5% higher in mid-morning trade, regaining some of the prior session’s 4% loss even as analysts at Goldman Sachs and TD Cowen on Wednesday trimmed target prices on the stock.
The German sportwear retailer on Tuesday reported currency-adjusted sales growth of 6.6%, and earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) within its prior guidance range of 622 million euros ($671.9 million).
It also flagged a “volatile environment that impacted the whole industry” and said the market remained challenging. It again flagged the impact of the devaluation of the Argentine peso on business.
— Jenni Reid
Vodafone Group.
Vodafone Group on Wednesday confirmed it is in exclusive talks with Swisscom over the sale of its Italian business, and that a deal has been agreed, subject to confirmation, for 8 billion euros ($8.66 billion) on a debt and cash free basis.
The British telecoms firm rejected an updated proposal from France’s Iliad to merge their Italian businesses at the end of January. The company had offered Vodafone 6.6 billion euros in cash and 2 billion euros in a shareholder loan.
“Vodafone has engaged extensively with several parties to explore market consolidation in Italy and believes this potential transaction delivers the best combination of value creation, upfront cash proceeds and transaction certainty for Vodafone shareholders,” the company said Wednesday of the Swisscom transaction.
It also stressed that the transaction was not certain and that a further announcement would be made in future.
— Jenni Reid
A trader works during the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on March 17, 2020 at Wall Street in New York City.
Johannes Eisele | Afp | Getty Images
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite ended Tuesday’s trading session in the green. Meanwhile, the Dow Jones Industrial Average came under pressure.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq climbed 0.17% and 0.37%, respectively. The Dow slipped nearly 97 points, or 0.25%.
— Hakyung Kim
One Big Tech stock has plummeted over 65% since its all-time high despite growing revenue and earnings.
Andrew Lapping, Ranmore’s chief investment officer, believes the stock is now at an “absolutely compelling” valuation for investors.
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— Ganesh Rao
Apple is canceling plans to build an electric car and is instead leaning into generative artificial intelligence, according to a report from Bloomberg News.
Apple scaled back its vision for the EV project last month and moved initial launch date back to 2028 from 2026, Bloomberg added. The company had originally planned for the car to be fully self driving but instead shifted to a semi-autonomous model last month. Some of the employees devoted to Apple’s EV project will now work on generative AI, the report added.
Apple stock.
Apple stock gained 0.5% following the news.
— Brian Evans
While it’s true that the current bull rally is being propelled by AI- and tech-adjacent stocks, Citi’s Scott Chronert disagrees with comparisons to the great Tech Bubble.
“Current multiples are well below ’99-’00 levels. Further, our subjective view is that the fundamental circumstance is meaningfully different now vs then,” Citi Research’s head of U.S. equity strategy wrote.
However, Chronert cautioned that stock fundamentals still have to support the rally in order to sustain his S&P 500 year-end target of 5,100.
“That said, the current spending ramp on gen AI infrastructure and product will need to translate to incremental revenue and growth drivers. But it is premature to judge that,” he added. “While the index may overshoot our year-end 5100 target in the short term, it seems premature to increase the probability of our 5700 bull case scenario.”
— Lisa Kailai Han
European markets are set to open in positive territory Wednesday, building on gains seen since the start of the week.
The U.K.’s FTSE 100 index is expected to open 40 points higher at 8,084, Germany’s DAX up 60 points at 18,201, France’s CAC 20 points higher at 8,130 and Italy’s FTSE MIB up 206 points at 34,331, according to data from IG.
Earnings come from Orange, Air Liquide, Iberdrola, Roche and Heathrow. Data releases include Germany’s Ifo Institute’s survey on business conditions and expectations for April.
— Holly Ellyatt
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