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    December 22, 2006

    Swiss watchmakers gain on higher exports

    Filed under: Statoil, Norsk Hydro, FCC, Richemont, Swatch, EADS, Sacyr-Vallehermoso

    The FTSE Eurofirst 300 dropped 1.1 percent to 1,472.65 during the week as trade was light as the Christmas holiday approached.

    Among the losers on the week was the Spanish construction sector. Sacyr-Vallehermoso, which dropped 7.4 percent to €46 after it said it has taken a bank loan of €5.175 billion to pay for its purchase of 20 percent of oil company Repsol. JP Morgan began coverage of the Spanish construction company with a rating of “underweight” and a target share price of €36. Meanwhile, Fomento de Construcciones y Contratas dropped 7.6 percent to €76.10 when Banesto dropped its recommendation on FCC from “overweight” to “neutral”.

    On the other hand, after seeing tough times due to delays in the construction of the Airbus A380, EADS added 5.7 percent during the week to €25.77 after it received new orders from Qantas and from Singapore Airlines.

    In the oil sector, Norsk Hydro had a very good week, adding 20.3 percent to NKr188 after it announced that it will merge its oil and gas production business with Statoil. It will keep its aluminium operations separate. Statoil, however, dropped 5.2 percent to NKr164 despite positive reaction to the deal from most brokers when Citigroup downgraded its recommendation from “buy” to “hold”.

    Swiss watch makers saw gains on exports that were up 13 percent in November compared to last year at the same time. Swatch was up 3 percent to SFr54.15, while Richemont added 4.1 percent to SFr70.50.





    December 19, 2006

    Steel sector falls on broker comments

    Filed under: Saltzgitter, Statoil, ThyssenKrupp, Norsk Hydro, OMV, Total, Hellenic Telecom, Swisscom

    The FTSE Eurofirst 300 was 0.6 percent lower on Tuesday to 1,477.94 as the oil and steel sectors declined on lower prices for commodities.

    In the steel sector, ThyssenKrupp dropped 1 percent to €33.27 even though UBS hiked its target share price when the broker left its recommendation at “neutral”. Salzgitter was also lower, falling 3.8 percent to €96.59 after Credit Suisse reduced its recommendation from “outperform” to “neutral”.

    Oil companies were also on the losing end for the session. After a gain of 20 percent on Monday, Norsk Hydro dropped 0.7 percent to NKr187.25. The decline came after Dresdner Kleinwort said that the Monday gains, coming after the announcement of a merger between Norsk Hydro and Statoil, were out of proportion. The broker cut its recommendation on Norsk Hydro to “sell”. Statoil was down 3.1 percent on the session, to NKr164.75, even though JP Morgan said that the merger makes sense for the oil company.

    Elsewhere in the oil sector, declines came after Monday’s drop in crude oil prices. Total was 0.9 percent lower to €54.50 as OMV dropped 1.2 percent to €43.33.

    In the telecommunications sector, Swisscom added 1.1 percent to SFr457.25 after it said that it will buy back a 25 percent share of Swisscom Mobile from UK company Vodafone. The news spurred Citigroup to hike Swisscom’s target share price from SFr430 to SFr452.50. Meanwhile, hopes of continued privatization sent Hellenic Telecom 1.9 percent higher to €23.72.





    December 18, 2006

    Eurofirst drops 0.1 percent on session

    Filed under: Statoil, Norsk Hydro, France Telecom, Deutsche Telekom, Telecom Italia, Generali

    The FTSE Eurofirst 300 dropped 0.1 percent to 1,487.41 on Monday, its first losing session after ten consecutive gains. In Norway, however, the Oslo All-Share index added 1.8 percent after Norsk Hydro saw big gains on the session.

    The gain for Norsk Hydro, 20.6 percent to NKr188.50, came after rival Statoil said the two will merge their oil and gas businesses to become the largest offshore oil operation in the world. Norsk’s aluminium business will continue as a stand-alone. The news sent Statoil down 1.7 percent to NKr170 after gains earlier in the session, closing at NKr170. The decline for Statoil came despite a “strong buy” rating from S&P Equitiy Research, which also set a 12-month target share price of NKr194.

    The telecommunications sector was mixed on the day. Telecom Italia added 0.2 percent to €2.32, but both France Telecom and Deutsche Telekom saw declines. France Telecom dropped 0.2 percent to €20.94, but is still up 35 percent from its low point of the year, reached on August 11. Lehman Brothers issued positive comments, but WestLB was more pessimistic, downgrading its rating from “hold” to “reduce”. Deutsche Telekom fell 0.9 percent to €13.83 even though Credit Suisse upped its target share price from €10.50 to €12.50.

    The insurance sector was also affected by broker actions. Italian insurer Generali dropped 1.1 percent to €34 on a downgrade from “add” to “reduce” from Dresdner Kleinwort.





    December 6, 2006

    Telecom Italia drops on broker downgrade

    Filed under: Statoil, Norsk Hydro, Deutsche Post, Telecom Italia, Bank of Ireland, Allied Irish Banks, Anglo Irish Bank, PPR

    The FTSE Eurofirst 300 was higher on Wednesday, but only by 0.9 points to 1,440.02 as investors were reluctant to do much ahead of new data on US employment, due to be released Thursday.

    Banks were higher after Anglo Irish Bank said that its full-year pre-tax profits were higher than had been expected and predicted that its good performance will continue into next year. Anglo Irish was up 3.3 percent to €14.82. The announcement and forecast helped Allied Irish Banks to gain 1.7 percent to €21.67, while Bank of Ireland added 2.3 percent to €16.73.

    Deutsche Post added 0.6 percent to €23.50 on positive broker comments after making presentations focusing on its DHL Express unit. Credit Suisse raised Deutsch Post’s target share price from €23.5 to €27, while Citigroup held its target share price at €21.50 but said there was a potential for valuation to rise.

    In the oil sector, Norsk Hydro was 3 percent lower to NKr147.25 after it said that its production until 2010 will be lower than it previously estimated due to capacity limitations within the industry. Statoil followed Norsk down, falling 1.6 percent to NKr168.50.

    Among telecommunications companies, Telecom Italia dropped 0.8 percent to €2.25 on a downgrade from “hold” to “sell” from ABN Amro, which cited operational weakness and limits on value creation.

    French retailer PPR was 2.2 percent lower to €113.50 after a placement of 900,000 shares by Morgan Stanley.





    November 17, 2006

    Oil shares lower on crude oil price declines

    Filed under: Infineon, ASML, Volkswagen, Porsche, Statoil, Norsk Hydro, STMicroelectronics, Man, Scania, Investor

    With an automobile manufacturing sector that fared well early in the week but saw declines later and crude oil prices that fell dramatically at the end of the week, the FTSE Eurofirst 300 was down 0.1 percent over the week to 1,462.05.

    The oil sector was down on both the day Friday and over the week as a whole. The worst performers were Statoil, which fell 4.8 percent on Friday and 3.3 percent during the week to NKr167.75 and Norsk Hydro, with declines of 5 percent on the day and 3.8 percent on the week to NKr152.

    Car and truck makers were mixed on the week. Volkswagen was up and Porsche declined on rumors that Porsche is getting ready to bid for VW. Porsche, which already owns 27.4 percent of VW, said it wants to increase its holding to 29.9 percent; if it acquires 30 percent, it will be forced to submit a bid. VW added 3.9 percent to €83.09 during the week, while Porsche was 1.6 percent lower to €900.

    VW, with large stakes in both MAN and Scania, is also a major player in the efforts of German truck maker MAN to acquire Swedish rival Scania. VW favors the merger while Investor, Scania’s other major shareholder, and Scania’s unionized workers, are against the merger. With rumors circulating this week that Scania is preparing a counter bid, MAN added 2.9 percent over the week to €73, while Scania’s B shares were 2.6 percent lower to SKr475. Investor ended the week at SKr155.50.

    The semiconductors sector was higher on the week on strong quarterly reports and ahead of the release of a new iteration of Microsoft’s Windows. STMicroelectronics was up 3.5 percent to €14.11, while Infineon added 5.2 percent to €9.78 and ASML gained 6.5 percent to €19.30.





    November 2, 2006

    Oil, steel lower in Europe

    Filed under: UBS, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Statoil, ThyssenKrupp, Continental, DnB Nor, Metrovacesa, Mittal Steel, Cepsa

    Equities markets in Europe were lower on Thursday on concerns about the state of the US economy and as the European Central Bank held interest rates level but issued comments strongly indicating that rates would be raised at its December meeting.

    The FTSE Eurofirst 300 closed down 0.4 percent to 1,443.94, while both the Xetra Dax in Germany and the Paris index dropped 1.1 percent, to 6,223.33 and 5,310.07 respectively.

    Most banks saw declines. Credit Suisse was an exception, adding 2.3 percent to SFr76.65 on a quarterly report that beat expectations. Elsewhere, UBS fell 1.1 percent to SFr74.10 and Deutsche Bank dropped 1.9 percent to €96.70. The largest bank in Norway, DnB Nor, was 2.9 percent lower to NKr83.70 after it said its pre-tax profits dropped by 1.5 percent.

    The oil sector was lower as crude oil prices continue their decline. Cepsa dropped 0.5 percent to €61.85, while Statoil was 1.2 percent lower to NKr165.50

    The steel sector also saw losses, with ThyssenKrupp down 1.7 percent to €29.34 and Mittal Steel dropping 3.2 percent to €32.72.

    Tire manufacturer Continental was 0.6 percent higher to €87.50 on positive broker comments from Citigroup and Merrill Lynch.

    Metrovacesa added 2.9 percent to €120 after it reported that net profits were up by 176 percent in the first nine months of the year. The Spanish property group’s gains were attributed to domestic growth as well as growth in its French unit.





    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 16, 2006

    Philips Electronics declines on quarterly report

    Filed under: Volkswagen, Statoil, Repsol, OMV, Ahold, Sacyr-Vallehermoso, Philips Electronics, Banca Popolare Italiana, Man, Banca Popolare di Verona e Novara, Scania, Investor, Delhaize

    The FTSE Eurofirst 300 reached yet another in its continuing series of closing highs on Monday, adding 0.2 percent to 1,443.50.

    The oil sector was instrumental in the gains as Repsol YPF added 4.6 percent to €27.35 on rumors that Spanish builder Sacyr Vallehermoso is looking to acquire 3 percent of the company. Sacyr added 1.7 percent to €41.22 on the talk even though Deutsche Bank issued a downgrade from “hold” to “sell”. Other oil companies were also higher, with OMV up 1.4 percent to €42.29 and Statoil 3.6 percent higher to NKr166.75.

    The Italian banking sector was mixed as Banca Popolare Italiana and Banca Popolare di Verona e Novara agreed to a merger deal worth €8.2 billion, which will create the third-largest retail bank in Italy. BPI added 3.6 percent on the news, to €10.76, but Verona was 7.5 percent lower to €21.09.

    In the ongoing saga of the proposed MAN/Scania merger, meanwhile, MAN was down 2.6 percent and Investor - Scania’s second-largest shareolder - was flat at SKr159.50, while Volkswagen added 0.1 percent to €70.30 and Scania B shares were 0.9 percent higher to SKr485.50. Over the weekend VW again signaled support for the deal.

    European supermarkets saw losses on the session. Delhaize was 0.9 percent lower to €63.50 and Ahold dropped 1.7 percent to €8.13 on reports that the two had abandoned merger talks, but neither company would comment on the speculation.

    Philips Electronics declined 1.1 percent to €27.61 due to third quarter core profits that were not up to expected levels. West LB reiterated its “buy” recommendation, saying that it believes that shares in Philips are undervalued.





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