Europe Shares Close Higher, Brush off US Jobs Miss; Mining Stocks Gain

European equities closed higher for a second day on Friday, as investors brushed off a worse-than-expected U.S. nonfarm payrolls report for January, and as steelmaker Arcelormittal surged on optimistic 2014 forecasts.

US jobs data misses

The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 Index provisionally closed up 0.7 percent at 1,299.53 points — despite wild fluctuations in early afternoon trade — following the release of jobs data in the U.S.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on Friday that employers added 113,000 positions as frigid weather and a deluge of storms dampened hiring. The unemployment rate fell to 6.6 percent.

U.S. stocks climbed for a second consecutive session following the report.

“This does confirm that there’s probably some degree of slowness out there, but I don’t think it’s catastrophic,” Brad McMillan, chief investment officer for Commonwealth Financial, which manages $81.6 billion for clients, said.

 

Name

Price

 

Change

%Change

Volume

FTSE

FTSE 100 Index

6571.68

 

13.40

0.20%

709095773

DAX

DAX Index

9301.92

 

45.34

0.49%

89003430

CAC 40

CAC 40 Index

4228.18

 

40.08

0.96%

139519332

IBEX 35

IBEX 35 Idx

10072.40

 

107.80

1.08%

328602423

In other news, Germany called on the European Court of Justice to decide whether the European Central Bank has exceeded its authority with its Outright Monetary Transactions (OMTs). These allowed the central bank to buy up the bonds of distressed euro zone countries if yields rose to a level where they couldn’t pay down their debt.

In China overnight, data from HSBC showed growth in the services sector fell to a near two-and-a-half-year low in January, the latest piece of data to confirm a slowdown.

Statoil shares rise

The basic resources sector was the standout gainer in trade, finishing the day up 1.7 percent.Arcelormittal and Vedanta Resources closed higher by around 0.8 and 4.3 percent respectively, with the former unveiling upbeat forecasts for the year ahead and highlighted growth in European steel consumption.

In other stocks news, Statoil shares closed higher by around 5.7 percent — the biggest gainer on the STOXX Europe 600 — despite announcing it was abandoning its 2020 production target and sharply reducing its capital expenditure plans. Its results for the fourth quarter were also described as “underwhelming” by analysts at Sarasin Research.

Assa Abloy closed up 2.2 percent after the Swedish lock maker announced a profit for its fourth quarter and raised its dividend.

Finnish mining technology company Outotec saw its shares provisionally closed down 10.4 percent after its fourth-quarter earnings missed market expectations.

Source: CNBC

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