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Europe close: Markets fall on political fears, French stocks at four-month low

(Sharecast News) - European stock markets suffered a sharp sell-off on Thursday with indices in Paris, Frankfurt and Milan all dropping 2% or more on the back of ongoing political uncertainty. The Stoxx 600 finished the day down 1.3% at 515.93, its lowest close since 29 May. Both the Dax and Cac 40 both dropped 2.0% each while the FTSE MIB slumped 2.2%. London's FTSE 100 however fared a little better, falling by just 0.6%.

Politics continued be weigh heavily on French socks in particular, following the advance of the far-right National Rally party at last weekend's European Parliament elections. The Cac 40 has now fallen by nearly 4% over the past four days alone, trading at its lowest since mid-February.

Meanwhile a pool by Elabe for newspaper Les Echos showed that president Emmanuel Macro's approval rating is now at its lowest since late-2018 following his decision on Sunday night to call for a snap election.

"It has been a week to forget for Europe. Snap French elections have sent investors scurrying from European stocks, just as those markets began to hit their stride after a decade and more of underperformance versus the US," said analyst Chris Beauchamp from IG.

"Compared to the prospect of hard-right members sitting in the National Assembly, the UK seems an island of stability, though the FTSE 100 and 250 have not been able to escape the general risk-off move today."

European markets were also reacting to Wednesday evenings' Federal Reserve policy meeting, in which the central bank scaled back its projections for interest-rate cuts this year to just one, from three previously.

In economic data, eurozone industrial production unexpectedly ticked lower in April, official data showed on Thursday. Seasonally-adjusted industrial production eased 0.1% in the single currency bloc, compared to an 0.5% improvement in March. Analysts had been expecting a small 0.2% uplift.

Across the wider EU, industrial production increased 0.5%. The biggest faller in both areas was intermediate goods, which saw output fall 0.2% in the EU and 0.4% in the eurozone.

Market movers

Atos fell slightly but erased earlier significant losses after the French IT firm announced the sale of its consultancy unit Worldgrid days after agreeing to a rescue deal that would dilute the holdings of existing shareholders.

Shares in UK money transfer firm Wise slumped by 11% as it forecast lower income growth in the medium term.

Halma shares jumped 13% as the company reported another year of record profit and revenue after a solid performance in the safety and the environment & analysis sectors.

Paris and Milan-listed auto stock Stellantis dropped around 3% after unveiling its medium-term capital plan, underwhelming after setting target liquidity levels of 25-30% of revenues to support shareholder returns.

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Important information: This information is not a personal recommendation for any particular investment. If you are unsure about the suitability of an investment you should speak to one of Fidelity’s advisers or an authorised financial adviser of your choice. When you are thinking about investing in shares, it’s generally a good idea to consider holding them alongside other investments in a diversified portfolio of assets. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns.

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