European stocks slip ahead of ECB meeting

Car and travel compnay shares fall after recent run of gains

European stocks slipped on Thursday as automakers and travel stocks fell after a recent run of gains, while investors counted on the European Central Bank to maintain an accommodative policy stance at a meeting later in the day.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index was down about 0.1 per cent, but held near record levels after a four-day rally.

Automakers fell for the third straight day, while travel and leisure stocks dropped 1.1 per cent following recent gains for the sectors on optimism about economic re-openings.

Shortage

German carmaker Volkswagen fell 1.8 per cent after a report said it expects a shortage in semiconductor supply to ease in the third quarter but sees the bottlenecks continuing in the long-term.

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Euro zone stocks fell 0.2 per cent ahead of the ECB’s policy decision and its projections for euro zone economic growth and inflation. The statement is due at 1145 GMT, followed by chief Christine Lagarde’s news conference at 1230 GMT.

The meeting comes as recent data from across the globe point to building inflationary pressures, particularly in commodities, as economies recover from long COVID-19 lockdowns.

The data has raised fears that major central banks will start to pare back their massive stimulus programmes sooner than expected, but policymakers have reaffirmed support until signs of a strong labour market recovery emerge.

“We think the ECB will not be convinced that the time is ripe to slow the pace of purchases, a view that is also supported by the recent dovish shift in ECB communication,” analysts at RBC Capital Markets wrote in a note.

Target

Euro zone inflation last month exceeded the central bank’s target of just under 2 per cent, a mark it has undershot for most of the last decade.

Another keenly watched reading, U.S. consumer prices data for May, will be released later in the day.

Interest rate-sensitive banks were flat, while tech stocks rose 0.6 per cent.

UK's FTSE 100 got a boost from a 2.2 per cent jump in BT Group after Altice Group said it had taken a 12.1 per cent stake in Britain's biggest broadband and mobile operator.

French digital music company Believe, which helps to distribute music via deals with platforms such as Spotify and Apple Music, tumbled 11.2 per cent in its stock market debut. – Reuters