Thursday, October 23, 2025
Thursday, October 23, 2025

Financials lift European shares to 3-week high; Rubis advances

European shares touched a three-week high on Monday, lifted by financials ahead of a pivotal week of central bank meetings, including the US Federal Reserve’s, while Rubis advanced after a report on the potential sale of the French fuel retailer.

The pan-European STOXX 600 was up 0.5 percent at 557.78 points, as of 0812 GMT, with rate-sensitive banks gaining 0.9 percent.

Among financials, UBS rose 1.7 percent after reports of the lender mulling a move to the United States in response to proposals from the Swiss government on new capital requirements.

Meanwhile, Fitch’s rating downgrade of France’s sovereign credit late on Friday did not seem to hurt the benchmark CAC 40 index, which instead jumped 1.2 percent to a three-week high, while domestic bonds were steady.

Banks such as SocGen, BNP Paribas and Credit Agricole added over 1 percent each. The broader index is poised to wipe off most of its losses since late last month when it became clear that the former French government could fall.

“The CAC 40 is not really even blinking to a Fitch rate decision,” Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote Bank, said.

“The reason for that is that the optimism (about Fed interest rate cuts) is echoing through the global financial markets right now, including French stocks.”

Several central banks will announce their policy decisions this week, including those in the UK, Japan and Canada, but the spotlight will be on the Fed.

Global market sentiment has been buoyant on expectations that the Fed will respond to signs of US labour market weakness with at least a 25-basis-point cut on Wednesday – its first potential dovish monetary policy move this year.

A report of bids for Rubis  from CVC Capital Partners  and Trafigura lifted the fuel retailer’s shares 7.2 percent to the top of the STOXX 600 index. The French company is valued at about $3.5 billion.

Germany’s Rheinmetall rose 2.1 percent after it said on Sunday it will buy NVL, the military arm of Luerssen Group.

The broader defence sector rose 1.2 percent to lead sectoral gains as geopolitical tensions flared in eastern Europe.

US stocks ended mixed on Friday, with the Dow dropping about six-tenths of a percent, the S&P 500 closing essentially flat, and the Nasdaq gaining more than four-tenths of a percent to record another record closing high.

Offshore wind developer Orsted  slid 2.4 percent after pricing its $9.42 billion rights issue at a 66.7 percent discount to the stock’s last close.

Supermarket group Sainsbury’s gained 5.1 percent after terminating talks with Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com over selling the Argos general merchandise retailer.

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