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    February 20, 2007

    VW up on 52 percent gain in operating profit

    Filed under: Other, Volkswagen, Porsche, Statoil, Heineken, Carlsburg, Inbev, Grolsch, Total, Unibail

    In Europe on Tuesday the FTSE Eurofirst 300 dropped 0.3 percent to 1,544.99. The real estate and oil sectors were lower, while carmakers saw gains.

    Porsche (Xetra: POR3; FWB: POR3) added 2.7 percent to €1,058.31, while Volkswagen (OTC: VLKAY) gained 8 percent to €94.94 on a full-year report that showed operating profit up 52 percent in 2006.

    Brewers were mixed after Carlsberg (OMX: CARL A, CARL B) said that higher capital expenditures would limit 2007 profit growth. Even though its full-year report fulfilled expectations, the Danish brewer dropped 6.7 percent to DKr583. Heineken (Euronext: HEIA) was also lower, by 2.3 percent to €39.36, ahead of its report that is due Wednesday.

    Elsewhere in the sector, InBev (Euronext: INB; NYSE: ABV) gained 0.5 percent to €53.07 as rumors of a merger with Anheuser-Busch (NYSE: BUD) continue to circulate. Grolsch (Euronext: GROL) added 3.3 percent to €32.94 after it reported that full-year profits exceeded expectations and announced an extra dividend.

    The oil sector declined on lower prices for crude oil. Total (Euronext: FP; NYSE: TOT) dropped 1.5 percent to €52.78, while Statoil (OSE: STL; NYSE: STO) fell 1.6 percent to NKr156.

    In the real estate sector, Unibail (PAR: UL) was 1.3 percent lower to €235.80 on a downgrade from “buy” to “hold” from Deutsche Bank. Also hurting the sector as a whole was news out of the UK that rising interest rates there are hurting the market.





    February 15, 2007

    French banks decline on session

    Filed under: Other, DaimlerChrysler, BNP Paribas, Societe Generale, Agricole, Heineken, Carlsburg, Inbev, Natexis Banques Populaire

    In Europe on Thursday, the FTSE Eurofirst 300 dropped 0.1 percent to 1,545.98, hurt by declines in the banking sector. Brewers saw gains, however, on bids rumors.

    With reports circulating that InBev is talking to US brewer Anhauser-Bush, and with analysts giving those rumors a good deal of credibility, the Belgian brewer added 4 percent to €52.80. Other European brewers were helped by the rumors, with Heineken gaining 2.3 percent to €40.26. Carlsberg was 2.7 percent higher to DKr615.

    French banks were lower on the session. Societe Generale and BNP Paribas both were hurt by their quarterly reports after Societe Generale reported Wednesday and BNP issued its report today, saying that while net profits were above expectations, operating profits were weaker than had been hoped. SG dropped 1.7 percent to €135 while BNP fell 3.8 percent to €83.70. Elsewhere among French banks, Credit Agricole and Natixis were each 2.6 percent lower, to €32.25 and €21.48.

    In the automobile manufacturing sector, DaimlerChrysler was 3.7 percent higher to €53.42 after it announced a restructuring for its US division and said that all options were on the table concerning its US operations, leading some to expect a spin-off or either a partial or full sale of the US unit.





    July 18, 2006

    European carmakers see losses

    Filed under: Volkswagen, DaimlerChrysler, BMW, Sandvik, Heineken, Carlsburg, Inbev, Atlas Copco, Coca-Cola Hellenic Bottling

    In Europe on Tuesday the FTSE Eurofirst 300 ws down by 0.1 percent to 1,271.62. The decline came as investors remained concerned about the situation in the Middle East.

    Brewers, however, had a good day. Belgian brewer InBev was up 2.3 percent to €38.19 on an earlier upgrade from “add” to “buy” from Dresdner Kleinwort, which cited coming higher profits in China. Carlsberg gained 2.6 percent to DKr416 as Morgan Stanley upgraded the Danish brewer from “underweight” to “equal weight”. Heineken advanced by 3.9 percent to €34.26 on raised target share prices from Merrill Lynch and Dresdner Kleinwort after it raised its full-year prediction for growth in profits. Dresdner Kelinwort upped Heineken’s target share price from €35 to €36, while Merrill Lynch increased it’s target for the brewer from €36.50 to €38.

    Elsewhere in beverages, Coca-Cola Hellenic Bottling gained 2.9 percent to €24.60 after Coca-Cola in the United States reported higher than predicted profits in the second quarter. The Greek bottler is the second-largest Coca-Cola bottler in the world.

    There were also gains in the engineering sector. Sandvik added 1.7 percent to SKr75.50, while Atlas Copco gained 2.5 percent to SKr166.50 after its second-quarter report said on Monday that profits were up by 32 percent.

    Among the day’s losers was the automobile manufacturing sector. BMW dropped 0.9 percent to €37.70 after Deutsche Bank downgraded the carmaker from “buy” to “hold”. Daimler Chrysler was 1.3 percent lower to €37.07. Volkswagen declined by 1.4 percent to €51.56.





    February 21, 2006

    European markets gain on utilities

    Filed under: Carlsburg, Eon, Endsea, Iberdrola, Gas Natural, Suez, Energias de Portugal, RWE, Veolia Environment, Svenska Handelsbanken

    European equities markets were up on Tuesday, mainly on gains in the energy sector spurred on by a bidding war for Spain’s Endsea.

    The FTSE Eurofirst 300 was up 0.7 percent to 1,355.05. In Frankfurt, the Xetra Dax fained 0.7 percent as well, to 5,836.56, while in Paris the CAC 40 was up to 5,013.78.

    Eon, Germany’s largest energy firm, has launched a counter bid for Endsea, which has already received an offer from Gas Natural, another Spanish company. Because Eon’s bid is nearly three times Gas Natural’s market value, it isn’t considered likely that Gas Natural will improve its bid. However, Gas Natural is expected by some analysts to instead bid for Iberdrola.

    Eon was trading up 2.9 percent to €96.10 after an initial decline. Endsea was up 9.4 percent to €27.87, while Iberdrola gained 6.7 percent to €27.05 and Gas Natural was up 0.9 percent to €24.56. Other European utilities also benefited from the speculation. Suez was up 3.3 percent to €30.66, Energias de Portugal gained 3.5 percent to €2.94, RWE rose 3.6 percent to €72.80, and Veolia Environment advanced by 3.9 percent to €44.00.

    In other sectors, brewer Carlsberg was down 3.4 percent to DKr369 despite reporting a full-year operating profit up 3.4 percent from 2004, well below the 7.3 percent increase that had been expected.

    Swedish bank Svenska Handelsbanken, however, reported higher than predicted operating profits for the full year, sending its shares up 4.4 percent to SKr201.





    February 13, 2006

    European markets up on automakers

    Filed under: Other, Volkswagen, BMW, Renault, Porsche, Statoil, Heineken, Carlsburg, Inbev, Clariant, Roche

    European equities markets saw increases on Monday, primarily on gains in the automobile manufacturing sector. Most brewers were also up, as were some parts of the chemicals industry. Other companies did not fare so well on the day.

    The FTSE Eurofirst 300 was up 0.3 percent to 1,326.87 after a loss of 0.5 percent on Friday. Meanwhile, Frankfurt’s Xetra Dax gained 0.5 percent to 5,728.68 and in France the CAC-40 was up 0.3 percent to 4,923.19.

    In the automobile manufacturing sector, Volkswagen was up 5.3 percent to €58.33 on the strength of an increased target price of €55, up from €38, by UBS. Porsche was also the recipient of an upgrade, from HVB, to “outperform” from “neutral”, sending its shares up 4.2 percent to €695,50. Porsche’s price target was also raised, from €688 to €718. Renault gained 4.2 percent to €83.05 and BMW gained 2.3 percent to €40.50.

    Meanwhile, brewers Heineken and Carlsberg both also received upgrades to “buy” from Merrill Lynch. Heineken gained 2.1 percent on the day to €29.14, while Carlsberg was up 1.9 percent to DKr368. Carlsberg’s joint venture with Scottish & Newcastle as well as its cost-cutting opportunities, were among the reasons for its ratings bump. Bucking the upward trend, Belgian brewer Inbev was down 1.8 percent to €38.59 as Merrill Lynch downgraded it to “sell” on issues related to valuation.

    In the chemicals sector, Swiss specialty chems company Clariant was up as much as 10 percent during the day and settled up 2.7 percent to €20.70 on news over the weekend that it is at an advanced stage in sale talks with private-equity firms.

    In the pharmaceuticals sector, Roche was down 2 percent to SFr188.10 even though it said there would be no financial impact due to its suspension of patient recruitment for trials on Avastin, a colon cancer drug. The suspension was said to be on account of safety concerns.

    Norwegian energy group Statoil dropped 3.4 percent to NKr170.50 after it reported that its fourth quarter operating profits were up less than had been anticipated.





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