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    May 16, 2006

    Eurofirst gains on telecoms, pharma

    Filed under: Novartis, France Telecom, Roche, OMV, Telenor, Eon, Sanofi-Aventis, Endsea, Gas Natural, Deutsche Telekom, Hellenic Telecom, Cosmote, Swisscom

    In Europe on Tuesday the FTSE Eurofirst 300 gained 0.2 percent to 1,347.58, with the telecommunications and pharmaceuticals sectors helping out substantially. Utilities were also up.

    Spanish utility Endsea released its first-quarter report, showing core profits that were up 31 percent. Growth in Europe and Latin America was credited with the improvement, sending shares in Endsea up 1 percent on the day to €26.55. Gas Natural and Eon, both interested in acquiring Endsea, were up 0.3 percent to €213.96 and 0.4 percent to €89.95 respectively.

    Among pharmaceuticals companies, Sanofi-Aventis added 2.8 percent to €75.70. Roche and Novartis were each up by 2.2 percent, with Roche at SFr214.60 and Novartis at SFr69.50. The gains for Novartis came on news that tests in the United States have shown that its drug Exelon is helpful in treating dementia related to Parkinson’s disease.

    It was the second day in a row for gains in the telecommunications sector. Hellenic Telecom was the biggest gain in the sector, adding 3.5 percent to €18.60. It is expected to bid for the shares of Mobi63 owned by the government of Serbia when those shares are auctioned in July. Deutsche Telekom, also likely to bid on the shares, was up 0.5 percent to €13.05. Elsewhere in fixed-line telecoms, Swisscom was up 1.3 percent to SFr405, while France Telecom rose by 1.5 percent to €17.49 on an upwardly revised revenue forecast from Bear Stearns.

    Mobile telecoms also saw gains. Telnor gained 2.9 percent to NKr80.75, while Cosmote added 2.6 percent to €19.68.

    In the oil sector, OMV of Austria dropped 5.7 percent to €45.13 despite a 24 percent rise in first-quarter profits when lower refining margins kept profits below levels that had been predicted.





    February 27, 2006

    Eurofirst higher on utilities merger

    Filed under: Other, Saipem, Eon, Endsea, Gas Natural, Suez, Gaz de France, ERG

    In mid-afternoon trade on Thursday the European equities markets were mixed, with the Eurofirst and Xetra Dax up slightly but the CAC-40 down just a bit. Once again, activity in the utilities sector was one of the driving forces behind the gains and losses.

    The FTSE Eurofirst 300 was up 0.1 percent in the middle of the afternoon session to 1,360.82. The Xetra Dax gained 0.3 percent to 5,885.43. In Paris, however, the CAC-40 dropped 0.2 percent to 5,066.38.

    Over the weekend, the French government approved the merger between the Franco-Belgian Suez and state-owned Gaz de France in a €73 billion dollar deal. Technically, Gaz de France is acquiring Suez, but the state-owned portion of the new company will be under 40 percent. The approved merger sent shares in both companies down, with Gaz de France losing 1.7 percent to €29.28 after rising earlier in the day. Suez lost 4.5 percent to €32.36.

    Elsewhere in the sector, Gas Natural was up 1 percent to €26.17, Endsea lost 0.1 percent to €28.32, and Eon dropped 0.1 percent as well, to €94.69 as it was reported that the directors of Gas Natural in Spain had met over the weekend to decide whether to match Eon’s larger counteroffer for Endsea. Meanwhile, EDF was up 4.6 percent to €46.51 when Morgan Stanley raised its target share price for the French electricity provider from €40 to €50.

    In the energy sector, Italian group ERG was up 1.2 percent to €20.30 as JP Morgan issued an initial rating of “overweight” for the company with a target share price of €23. Oilfield services company Saipem was up 11.8 percent to €18.07 ahead of its full year earnings report and after purchasing Eni’s engineering unit, Snamprogetti.





    February 23, 2006

    Eurofirst lower on mixed results

    Filed under: Other, Endsea, Gas Natural, Suez, RWE, DnB Nor, Metro, Carrefour, FCC, EDF, Nestle, Numico

    In Europe on Thursday the equities markets fell, with the FTSE Eurofirst 300 declining by 0.2 percent to 1,355.46. Banking and retail were up on the day, but utilities were mixed and foods were down.

    Among bankers DnB Nor, Norway’s largest bank, was up 0.9 percent to NKr81.50 after a strong performance in its brokerages led to a 28 percent leap in pre-tax profits in the fourth quarter.

    German retailer Metro was up 4 percent to €43.90 on reports that German business confidence was at a 14-year high. Elsewhere in the retail sector, France’s Carrefour turned a comment by Deutsche Bank that its stock was undervalued into a gain of 3.1 percent to €40.86.

    In the utilities sector, bid rumours continued but not to the huge benefit of companies in the sector as earlier in the week. Gas Natural was up 2.6 percent to €24.90 when Spanish construction company FCC said it would think about joining in a bid for Endsea. While Gas Natural gained on the talk, FCC dropped 0.4 percent to €57.10 and Endsea declined by 0.7 percent to €28.06. French utility Suez, gained 7 percent early in the day on rumors that it might be a takeover target by Enel, but by the end of the day Suez was only up 0.3 percent to €32. Elsewhere in the sector, EDF was up 1.5 percent to €42.47 on an announcement that its net profits had doubled, while RWE dropped 2.7 percent to €72.60 after issuing a statement saying that operating profits in 2006 would likely only grow by 5 to 10 percent.

    Nestle was down by 3.3 percent to SFr386.50 despite a report of net profits in line with expectations and up 20.7 percent from 2004s figures. One analysts said that the profits report showed Nestle’s strength and that share prices do not reflect that strength, while Nestle’s chief executive put down reports that the company could be interested in bidding for Danone or Numico. Numico, meanwhile, dropped 1.7 percent to €37.13 as it announced disappointing results on fourth quarter sales, especially in baby food.





    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.





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