By Pranav Kashyap
(Reuters) – European shares climbed on Tuesday, boosted by the real-estate sector, while investors also awaited the widely expected rate cut by the European Central Bank later in the week.
The pan-European index rose 0.3% after gaining nearly 1% on Monday.
Rate-sensitive real estate sector advanced 1% ahead of the ECB’s interest rate decision on Thursday.
With markets fully pricing in a 25 basis-point cut this week, investors will keep a close eye on cues on likely rate cuts in October and December.
“I don’t think the ECB would prefer to be too dovish at this point. There’s no growth mandate for ECB, compared to the Fed that has a dual mandate,” said Geoff Yu, senior macro strategist at BNY.
“Developments on the other side of the pond are still the main drivers of sentiment right now. The balance is probably a bit too lopsided in favour of the Fed.”
Given the dominance of U.S. data, traders were also focused on Wednesday’s inflation report, which could provide clarity on the size of the Federal Reserve’s rate cut when it meets next week.
The first debate between U.S. presidential candidates Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump ahead of the Nov. 5 election is due later in the day.
“There will be direct observance of the event. This is not just the U.S. story… it’s much more for European story as well, given the tax burden that Europe faces,” BNY’s Yu said.
ticked up 0.2% after data showed the country’s inflation slowed to 2% in August.
Elsewhere, British labour data showed average weekly earnings, excluding bonuses, were 5.1% higher than a year earlier in the three months to the end of July.
It’s benchmark was down 0.4%.
The STOXX was also supported by gains in technology companies. Capgemini and SAP SE (ETR:) gained 7% and 0.7%, respectively, after Oracle (NYSE:)’s upbeat results.
Heavy-weight AstraZeneca (NASDAQ:) shed 5.1%, capping the STOXX’s gains, after detailed study results showed its experimental lung cancer drug did not significantly improve patients’ overall survival results.
The healthcare sector lost 0.8%.
Hearing aid companies were the biggest percentage decliners after Apple (NASDAQ:) said its new Airpods can work as hearing aids. Amplifon fell about 6%, Sonova, Demant and GN Store Nord lost between 3% and 4%.
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