European equities extended a rebound into a third day as concern eased about global economic prospects in the aftermath of the Brexit vote.
The Stoxx Europe 600 Index closed 1.6 per cent higher, with all 19 industry groups up. The UK’s FTSE 100 Index entered a bull market after Monday’s rise of 1.4 per cent took its gains since a February low to 21 per cent.
Stocks extended an advance after the UK's energy minister Andrea Leadsom withdrew her candidacy and cleared the way for Home Secretary Theresa May to succeed David Cameron as the next British prime minister tomorrow.
DUBLIN
The Iseq rose 1.9 per cent to 5,688.9 points as it rallied for a third straight day following heavy losses in the wake of the UK referendum.
Hibernia Reit and Green Reit rose at least 2.6 per cent as investors continued to pour money into Irish property investment companies on hopes that Ireland may win business from London in light of Brexit.
Bank of Ireland was also in demand, adding 6.3 per cent to 18.5 cents, while CRH added 2.4 per cent to €25.93.
Kingspan gained 1.9 per cent to €20, with broker Cantor Fitzgerald saying the stock's almost slump since the UK referendum has been "overdone".
However, recruitment firm CPL lost 1.6 per cent after the company accompanied assurances in a trading update around its full-year earnings by cautioning that the net impact of Brexit remains uncertain.
LONDON
A
third day of gains helped push the FTSE 100 Index, which is dominated by perceived safe haven stocks such as British
American Tobacco
,
Diageo
,
Reckitt Benkiser
and GlaxoSmithKline, into bull-market territory.
After recovering from its post-Brexit plunge in just four days, the gauge of UK megacaps continued its rally, and is now up 21 per cent from its February low. Analysts have joined investors and strategists in taking note, boosting profit-growth estimates for FTSE 100 members by about 4.5 per cent in just over a week, the biggest such upgrade in more than a decade. The FTSE 100 extended gains as May emerged as the next UK prime minister, ending the threat of a protracted leadership contest.
Taylor Wimpey and Barratt Developments climbed more than 7 per cent, while Glencore and Anglo American rallied at least 6 per cent.
While the gauge of the largest UK companies is up 7.1 per cent this year, the FTSE 250 Index of mid-cap firms, more dependent on the domestic economy, remains 4.2 per cent lower.
EUROPE
Commodity producers led the advance on Monday, with data showing China’s factory-gate deflation eased for a sixth straight month.
Among stocks active on corporate news, LafargeHolcim rose 4.4 per cent after agreeing to sell an Indian building-materials business to Nirma for an enterprise value of about $1.4 billion. Ireland’s CRH had been linked at one stage to the bidding.
Airbus gained 2.4 per cent after on reports that it is poised to win an order for as many as 100 jets from AirAsia.
NEW YORK
The US benchmark S&P 500 stock index set a record intraday high of 2,143.16 points by mid-afternoon trading as last week’s strong monthly US jobs report worked its way into financial markets, and Wall Street sentiment was helped by a positive European session.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite rose above 5,000 for the first time since December.
Tech shares rose for a fourth day, gaining 0.6 per cent to the highest in a month. The group was boosted by semiconductor companies, including Qorvo and Skyworks Solutions.
Twitter slipped 2.4 per cent after its rating was lowered to neutral from buy at SunTrust Robinson Humphrey. The firm said Twitter is "highly unlikely" to be bought this year.
(Additional reporting Bloomberg/Reuters)