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    February 12, 2007

    European semiconductors sector mixed

    Filed under: Other, Infineon, ASML, Neste Oil, Statoil, Eurobank, Euronext, Deutsche Borse, Total, STMicroelectronics, Piraeus Bank, Alpha Bank, National Bank of Greece

    The FTSE Eurofirst 300 was lower in Monday, closing at 1533.15, a decline of 0.6 percent.

    The Greek banking sector saw declines after a new report showed that use of household credit grew substantially in November, causing some investors to worry that with Eurozone interest rates rising loan defaults could reach worrisome levels. Alpha Bank dropped 1.2 percent to €24.02, while National Bank of Greece fell 1.3 percent to €38.60. EFG Eurobank was 2 percent lower to €29.10 and Bank of Piraeus was down 2.2 percent to €26.40.

    Stock exchanges were lower after it was announced that stockholders in the London Stock Exchange had rejected US exchange operator Nasdaq’s bid for the company. Deutsche Borse dropped 2.2 percent to €157.45. Euronext, still in the process of closing a merger with NYSE Group, fell 4.2 percent to €85.95.

    In the oil sector, a decline of 2 percent in the price of crude oil sent shares lower. Statoil was 0.6 percent lower to NKr162.25, hurt not only by lower prices but by a fourth quarter report that did not rise to expected levels. French oil company Total was down 1.2 percent to €52.10. Neste Oil dropped 2.9 percent to €23.70.

    The semiconductors sector was mixed. STMicroelectronics dropped 1.4 percent to €14.53, but Infineon added 1.3 percent to €12.15 after last week’s announcement of new contracts and on new reports that private equity could be interested in bidding. Meanwhile, chip-making equipment manufacturer ASML dropped 2.7 percent to €19.16.





    January 15, 2007

    EADS 2.7 percent higher on French helicopter order

    Filed under: Neste Oil, Statoil, Repsol, Norsk Hydro, OMV, Merck, EADS, Safran, MTU Aero Engines

    In slow trading due to the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday in the United States, the FTSE Eurofirst 300 nonetheless gained 0.6 percent on the session to close at 1,520.04.

    The oil sector was higher even though crude oil prices remained low. OMV added 0.5 percent to €39.38 despite a UBS target share price downgrade from €45 to €43. Repsol gained 0.7 percent to €25.40, while Neste Oil was 2.5 percent higher to €23.07. Even bigger gains were achieved by Norsk Hydro and Statoil, proposed merger partners. Norsk was up 3.2 percent to NKr188.25, while Statoil added 4 percent to NKr162.

    In the aerospace sector, EADS gained 2.7 percent to €25.75 on the news that its Eurocopter unit had won a contract to build 37 helicopters for the French police. Engine makers for airplanes, however, were mixed. MTU Aero Engines added 3.2 percent to €37.16 as Deutsche Bank reiterated its “buy” recommendation on the German manufacturer. However, Deutsche Bank reduced its recommendation for French engine maker Safran from “hold” to “sell” on earnings issues. Safran dropped 1 percent, to €17.20.

    Merck added 1.8 percent to €89.04 on a raised price target and reconfirmed “overweight” rating from Lehman Brothers. The German pharmaceuticals company, which offered last week for the 16 percent of Serono that it does not yet hold, added 1.8 percent to €89.04.





    January 5, 2007

    Airlines higher in Europe

    Filed under: Neste Oil, Statoil, Air France-KLM, Eon, Suez, RWE, Veolia Environment, Gaz de France, Deutsche Telekom, KPN, Telecom Italia, Total, Lufthansa, Ryanair

    In a holiday shortened week, the FTSE Eurofirst 300 added 0.2 percent to close on Friday at 1,486.08. Gains peaked on Wednesday when the index breached the 1,500 level.

    Airlines did well during the week as falling crude oil prices provided the hope that fuel costs would decline. Ryanair added 5.3 percent to €10.98, while Air France-KLM was 7.2 percent higher to €34.20. Lufthansa was also helped by positive comments from brokers after it sold its 50 percent share of travel company Thomas Cook, gaining 7.8 percent over the week to €22.47.

    The telecommunications sector also saw gains. Telecom Italia added 3.1 percent to €2.36, while Deutsche Telekom was 4.4 percent higher to €14.45 and KPN gained 4.9 percent to €11.30.

    On the other hand, European utilities were hurt by concerns that European Union regulators would come down hard on the sector after an investigation found evidence of misbehavior. Gaz de France was 1 percent lower to €34.50 and Suez fell 2.1 percent to €38.42 among rumors that a bid for Suez from a French billionaire could prevent their proposed merger. Elsewhere in the sector, RWE dropped 3.6 percent to €80.50, while Eon was down 5.4 percent to €97.26 and Veolia Environment fell 9.2 percent over the week to €53.05.

    The oil sector was hurt by falling crude oil prices. Total ended the week 3.5 percent lower to €52.75, while Neste Oil dropped 5 percent to €21.89 and Statoil fell 5.9 percent to NKr155.50.





    January 4, 2007

    Telecoms gain in Europe

    Filed under: Neste Oil, Statoil, ThyssenKrupp, Air France-KLM, France Telecom, KPN, Total, Lufthansa, Ryanair, Cosmote, Mittal Steel, Hellenic Petroleum, Vallourec

    The FTSE Eurofirst 300 was 0.3 percent lower on Thursday, closing at 1,499.03 on declines in the oil and steel sectors. The decline came even though the telecommunications and airlines sectors were up on the session.

    Among telecoms, fixed-line carriers added 1.7 percent. France Telecom added 1.4 percent to €21.68, while KPN gained 3.2 percent to €11.26 and Hellenic Telecom was 3.5 percent higher to €24. Meanwhile, mobile carrier Cosmote added 3.3 percent to €22.98.

    Airlines were helped by declines in crude oil prices as investors hoped that fuel prices would also go down. Air France-KLM added 1.2 percent to €33.12. Lufthansa was helped when Dresdner Kleinwort raised its target share price from €21.60 to €26 and repeated its “buy” recommendation on the air carrier. The positive comments came after Lufthansa sold its 50 percent stake in Thomas Cook, the travel agency. Lufthansa was 2.1 percent higher to €21.96. Ryanair gained 3.6 percent to €10.80 after it said that while its aircraft were slightly less full on average last year, it carried 19 percent more passengers.

    In the oil sector, Total dropped 2 percent to €53.45, while Neste Oil fell 3 percent to €22.04 and Statoil was 3.7 percent lower to NKr157.25.

    Steelmakers continued to suffer from a sector downgrade issued by Credit Suisse on Wednesday. Mittal Steel dropped 2.8 percent to €30.65, ThyssenKrupp was 3.4 percent lower to €34.73, and Vallourec fell 4.7 percent to €208.40.





    January 3, 2007

    Oil sector drops on Merrill Lynch downgrade

    Filed under: UBS, Neste Oil, Saltzgitter, ThyssenKrupp, Norsk Hydro, Eurobank, Mittal Steel, Saras, Alpha Bank, Hellenic Petroleum

    The FTSE Eurofirst 300 added 0.1 percent Wednesday to close at 1,502.83 as a strong opening in New York helped overcome earlier declines due to profit taking.

    The mining and oil sectors were mixed as base metals prices dropped and broker sentiment on oil was negative. Norsk Hydro, which has aluminium as well as oil interests, dropped 3.2 percent to NKr188.50. Meanwhile, Merrill Lynch reduced its rating on the oil sector as a whole to “underweight” on the basis of falling refining margins. Italian refiner Saras fell 0.8 percent to €4.05, while Neste Oil was 1.8 percent lower to €22.71. On the other hand, Hellenic Petroleum added 5.2 percent to €11.10 after a consortium it participates in found natural gas in Libya.

    Steelmakers were hurt by a sector downgrade from Credit Suisse, which reduced its recommendation from “market weight” to “underweight”. ThyssenKrupp dropped 2 percent to €35.96, while Salzgitter fell 2.3 percent to €99.31 and Mittal Steel was 4 percent lower to €31.55.

    The banking sector was higher on the session. UBS added 2.5 percent to SFr75.90. Greek banks Alpha Bank and EFG Eurobank both saw gains as well, with Alpha up 2.6 percent to €23.90 and EFG 2.9 percent higher to €28.70.





    October 30, 2006

    European banks decline on quarterly reports

    Filed under: Neste Oil, Volkswagen, Capitalia, BMW, Peugeot, Raiffeisen, Statoil, Norsk Hydro, Fiat, ABN Amro, Cepsa, Erste Bank

    Declines in the oil and automobile manufacturing sectors sent the FTSE Eurofirst 300 0.3 percent lower on Monday to 1,445.8. Carmakers were lower on profit taking, while oil stocks dropped on falling crude oil prices.

    In the automobile manufacturing sector, BMW dropped 1.2 percent to €44.64 and Fiat declined 1.3 percent to €13.68. Peugeot was 1.5 percent lower to €44.33 after it cut full-year estimates after reports showed sales down in the first nine months of the year. Volkswagen fell 1.7 percent to €77.40 on mixed reviews from brokers. West LB reduced its recommendation from “hold” to “reduce”, but Goldman Sachs, UBS, and Deutsche Bank all raised VW’s target share price.

    Declining oil prices sent Spanish company Cepsa down 1.3 percent to €60.90. Statoil was 2.2 percent lower to NKr165.25 even though it exceeded expectations in its third quarter report on previously high prices for crude. Neste Oil dropped 2.3 percent to €24.81, while Norsk Hydro’s lower than anticipated report on third-quarter profit sent its shares 2.8 percent lower to NKr148.75.

    Elsewhere, banks were also lower on the session. Erste Bank of Austria did better than the rest of the sector, losing only 0.2 percent to €53.80 on a report of net profits up by 16 percent in the third quarter, which was just lower than had been expected. Trading income was down by 22 percent. ABN Amro also dropped 0.2 percent, to €22.95, after it said its net profit dropped by 5.6 percent in the quarter. Raiffeisen International dropped 0.7 percent to €89.60.





    October 24, 2006

    Statoil up on Snorre field reopening

    Filed under: Neste Oil, Handelsbanken, Raiffeisen, Statoil, Norsk Hydro, Metrovacesa, Swedbank, SEB, Alcatel, Allied Irish Banks, Erste Bank

    In Europe on Tuesday, the FTSE Eurofirst 300 ended slightly lower, down 0.1 percent to 1,449.5

    Banks were mixed on the session, with Erste Bank 1.6 percent higher to €54.15 on an upgrade to “buy” from Merrill Lynch, while Raiffeisen added 2.4 percent to €89 and Allied Irish Banks gained 2.8 percent to €21.25. Swedish banks, however, were lower on the session. SEB dropped 1 percent to SKr206, Swedbank was 1.7 percent lower to SKr225.50, and Handelsbanken fell 4.5 percent to SKr192 on third quarter results that saw both operating profits and gross income failing to meet predictions.

    Oil companies were mixed as well. Statoil was 1.1 percent higher to NKr167.75 on the announcement that its Snorre oilfield, closed due to a safety problem concerning lifeboats, is being brought back online. Neste Oil added 4.5 percent to €24.35 after declines on Monday on a downgrade from Morgan Stanley. Norsk Hydro, however, dropped 0.5 percent to NKr150.75 after it said that operating profits were up 18 percent in the third quarter, less than had been anticipated.

    In the construction sector, Spanish builder Metrovacesa dropped 8.1 percent to €115.70 on remarks from the government stock market regulator that its listing on the Ibex index should be examined.

    Alcatel, the French telecommunications equipment maker, added 7.2 percent to €10.29. While net profits were down 42 percent in the quarter, mostly due to one-time gains during the third quarter last year, profits for US telecom Lucent, which Alcatel is purchasing, posted results that were better than had been predicted.





    October 23, 2006

    Crude oil prices send oil sector lower

    Filed under: Neste Oil, Raiffeisen, Statoil, Repsol, Norsk Hydro, Air France-KLM, OMV, Lufthansa, Ryanair, UniCredit, Saras, Natexis Banques Populaire, Royal Dutch Shell, Hypovereinsbank, Danske Bank, Hellenic Petroleum

    The FTSE Eurofirst 300 added 0.4 percent to 1,450.5 on Monday’s session as financial sectors saw gains that helped balance out losses in the oil sector.

    The banking sector was helped by expectations of good earnings reports as well as by continuing bids rumors. Italian bank UniCredit was 0.8 percent higher to €6.62 and Hypovereinsbank added 1.9 percent to €36.63 on the news that Polish legislators voted on Friday to approve a merger between the two banks. Elsewhere in the sector, Raiffeisen International gained 1.1 percent to €86.95 and Danske Bank was 2 percent higher to DKr246 ahead of next week’s quarterly report. Natexis Banques Populaire gained 3.2 percent to €225.20 on speculation about an upcoming merger.

    Airlines did well as oil prices continued to decline. Ryanair was 1.3 percent higher to €8.82, while Air France-KLM gained 2.1 percent to €26.35 and Lufthansa added 2.4 percent to €17.31. The sector was also helped by a 2.9 percent gain in the UK by British Airways on an upgrade from Citigroup.

    Dropping oil prices did now, however, give any comfort to the oil sector. Repsol and Royal Dutch Shell each dropped 0.8 percent, to €25.83 and €27.03 respectively. Italian refiner Saras was 1.9 percent lower to €4.06 on a lower target share price from Morgan Stanley, which handed out target downgrades to other companies in the sector as well.

    OMV fell 2 percent to €41.25, while Statoil was 2.6 percent lower to NKr166 even though Banc of America upgraded the Norwegian company. In the Greek portion of the sector, Hellenic Petroleum dropped 2.6 percent to €9.84, again on a Morgan Stanley downgrade. Morgan Stanley also reduced Neste Oil’s recommendation, from “overweight” to “equal weight”, sending the Finnish refiner 3 percent lower to €23.30. Norsk Hydro saw the biggest loss in the sector, dropping 4.1 percent to NKr151.50.





    October 3, 2006

    Rumors: Scania and VW thinking of a joint bid on MAN

    Filed under: Neste Oil, Volkswagen, Peugeot, Renault, Statoil, Repsol, Norsk Hydro, Total, Man, Scania, Investor

    With the European oil sector declining again on Tuesday due to sharp drops in crude oil prices, the FTSE Eurofirst 300 was 0.2 percent lower to 1,392.86.

    In the oil sector, Total was down 1.4 percent to €50.85 and Repsol YPF dropped 1.8 percent to €23.30. Statoil fell 2.8 percent to NKr149, while Norsk Hydro declined 3.1 percent to NKr 139.25 and Neste Oil was 5.1 percent lower to €21.99.

    The automobile manufacturing sector saw declines on broker downgrades. Peugeot fell 0.7 percent to €43.72 and went as low as €42.79 earlier in the session after UBS dropped the carmaker’s rating from “neutral” to “reduce” and cut its target share price from €40 to €38. Meanwhile, Renault was 3.5 percent lower to €88.60 on a downgrade from “outperform” to “neutral” by Credit Suisse, which cited a drop in sales in the third quarter.

    The MAN/Scania story took another direction amid rumors that Scania and Volkswagen are thinking of jointly bidding for MAN. MAN said it has not received an offer and none of the other players - Scania and its largest shareholders, Volkswagen and Investor - were willing to comment. Investor B shares dropped 1.3 percent to SKr152, but Scania B shares added 0.6 percent to SKr439, Bolkswagen gained 1.5 percent to €67.98 and MAN was 5.7 percent higher to €74.





    September 25, 2006

    Airlines mixed on bids rumors, oil price declines

    Filed under: Neste Oil, Statoil, Norsk Hydro, Lufthansa, Ryanair, Sacyr-Vallehermoso, Eiffage, SAS, Novo Nordisk, OHL, UCB, Schwarz

    Despite gains in several sectors due to continuing mergers and acquisitions news and rumors, the FTSE Eurofirst 300 dropped 0.1 percent to 1,370.04 on Monday as crude oil prices continued to decline.

    Speculation that Spanish construction company OHL was discussing a possible merger with French peer Eiffage sent Eiffage 3.6 percent higher to €78.25. OHL added 4 percent to €15.75. Meanwhile, Sacyr Vallehermoso gained 1 percent to €32.05 on rumors that Sacyr is thinking of adding to its current 33.3 percent holding in Eiffage.

    In the pharmaceuticals sector, UCB of Belgium said it would purchase Schwarz Pharma of Germany, a move that Credit Suisse said made sense. The news sent UCB 0.1 percent lower to €47, but Schwarz was 17.7 percent higher to €89.07. Others in the sector were benefited by the news, including Novo Nordisk, which gained 1.3 percent to DKr432.

    There was also bids talk in the airlines sector as Lufthansa was said to be looking to buy, although it said that remarks by its CEO had been misinterpreted. Lufthansa dropped 0.4 percent to €16.14. Despite the denials SAS, which was said to be one of the rivals Lufthansa was interested in, was 2.1 percent higher to SKr97. Ryanair added 3.7 percent to €8.45. The gains were helped as well by the falling oil prices.

    Declines in the oil sector were substantial. Neste Oil fell 3.8 percent to €21.16, while Norsk Hydro dropped 4.5 percent to NKr138.75 and Statoil declined 5 percent to KNr147.25.





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