European equities ended higher Tuesday as the countdown to a potential debt deal between Greece and its creditors continued.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 index closed around 1.2 percent higher Tuesday, with all sectors ended the day in positive territory.
U.S. stocks, meanwhile, traded in narrow range on Tuesday as investors digested mixed economic reports for indications on the timing of a rate hike.
Symbol |
Name |
Price |
|
Change |
%Change |
Volume |
FTSE |
FTSE 100 Index |
6834.87 |
|
9.20 |
0.13% |
584185027 |
DAX |
DAX Index |
11542.54 |
|
82.04 |
0.72% |
88926065 |
CAC 40 |
CAC 40 Index |
5057.68 |
|
59.07 |
1.18% |
133214136 |
IBEX 35 |
IBEX 35 Idx |
11402.50 |
|
34.30 |
0.30% |
180109840 |
Flash data released Tuesday morning showed that the composite purchasing manager’s index (PMI) for the euro zone in June rose to 54.1, up from 53.6 in May – a 49-month high for the index by Markit that surveys activity in the region’s services and manufacturing industries.
The French CAC index closed around 1.2 percent higher, after composite PMI data for the country rose to 53.4 in June, up from a final reading of 52.0 in May.
The German DAX also closed higher at 0.7 percent, while the London FTSE 100 index closed just 0.1 percent higher.
Greek hopes
Markets continue to hope that Greece will come to some kind of reforms-for-rescue deal with its international creditors this week, after Athens presented a new set of reform proposals Monday. Greece owes the IMF 1.6 billion euros on June 30 and could default on the debt without more aid.
The reforms were presented to euro zone finance ministers and leaders at a set of emergency summits in Brussels Monday.
“I am convinced that we will come to a final agreement in the course of this week,” European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker told a late-night news conference.
But German Chancellor Angela Merkel struck a more cautious note, saying she couldn’t give “any guarantee” that an agreement would come.
At the close on Tuesday, the euro continued to show signs of weakness against the dollar, down 1.35 percent at $1.118.
Source: CNBC