European recovery set to stall, outlook cautious

European recovery set to stall, outlook cautious

by Reuters News Service
222 views 3 mins read

A recent recovery in European shares looks set to stall and not reclaim end-2021 levels for well over a year, capped by fears of an energy supply crunch, slowing growth and sky-high inflation, a Reuters poll found.

The median forecast from the survey of 11 fund managers, strategists and analysts polled Aug. 9-23 saw the pan-European STOXX 600 index (.STOXX) dipping to 425 points by year-end, around 1.5 per cent lower than Tuesdayโ€™s close of 431.35.

โ€œThe outlook remains quite uncertain โ€ฆ rate action together with the persistent increase in fuel/electricity prices will drive the economy into a (short-term) recession,โ€ said Luca Rubini at Bestinver.

However, the blue-chip index (.STOXX50E) was expected to rise 2.7 per cent to 3,750 by the end of this year, the median of 17 forecasts showed.

European shares had a terrible first half but showed signs of a recovery in July and August on a better than expected earnings season, although a slowing global economy was now expected to clip further gains.

The STOXX 600 (.STOXX) is on track for its best two-monthly performance since the two months to the end of April 2021, having gained over 6 per cent in July and August alone.

By end-2023 it was expected to have gained a little over 7 per cent to 465 points, still short of the 487.8 it closed 2021 at.

EARNINGS SURPRISINGLY RESILIENT

According to the latest data from Refinitiv I/B/E/S, second-quarter earnings are expected to have increased over 29 per cent, mainly due to a rise in profits from the energy sector as oil and gas prices remain elevated.

Excluding the energy sector, earnings are expected to have increased around 9 per cent, Refinitiv data showed.

โ€œThe good news is that earnings season was better,โ€ said Arun Sai, senior multi-asset strategist at Pictet Asset Management in London.

โ€œCorporates are definitely more resilient than we would have anticipated.โ€

Sai cautioned however that earnings expectations are likely to come down as analysts begin to price in a European recession.

โ€œWhatโ€™s worrying about expectations for earnings growth for the next three years is that it comes from further margin expansion.

โ€œNot only are they saying corporates will be able to protect margins, theyโ€™re saying theyโ€™re going to expand further, right in the face of economic activity rolling over,โ€ Sai said.

Signs that economic activity is slowing in the euro zone are clear.

Survey measures of activity, such as Purchasing Managersโ€™ Indexes, have shown business activity has ground to a halt or even contracted in some countries, with expectations things will get worse as Europe faces the prospect of a gas supply crunch during the winter.

Those fears were heightened on Friday when Russiaโ€™s state energy company Gazprom said it would be halting natural gas supplies to Europe via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline for three days at the end of the month.

On a regional basis, respondents to the survey expected Germanyโ€™s DAX (.GDAXI) to hit 14,000 points by year-end, a 6.1 per cent increase from Tuesdayโ€™s close.

Franceโ€™s CAC was seen hitting 6,342 points, down 0.3 per cent from Tuesdayโ€™s close, while Britainโ€™s FTSE 100 was expected to close the year at 7,450 points, down 0.5 per cent from Tuesdayโ€™s closing price.

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