BLBG: European Stocks, U.S. Index Futures Fall; Infineon, ASML Drop
By Adam Haigh
Dec. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Stocks fell in Europe, led by technology shares, and U.S. index futures dropped after Infineon Technologies AG and Research In Motion Ltd. reported earnings that disappointed investors.
Infineon, Europe’s second-largest maker of semiconductors, tumbled 22 percent on a wider-than-expected net loss. ASML Holding NV and Nokia Oyj sank more than 3 percent. Research In Motion declined 1.4 percent in German trading after third- quarter profit missed its forecast.
Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index lost 1.8 percent to 193.75 at 9:45 a.m. in London, extending this year’s retreat to 47 percent. More than $32 trillion has been erased from the value of global equities as the collapse of the U.S. mortgage market sparked financial turmoil that pushed economies into recession.
“Everybody has been surprised by the scale of this mess and it is going to get worse,” said Hans Goetti, who oversees $10 billion as chief investment officer at LGT Bank in Liechtenstein (Singapore) Ltd., part of the bank for the wealthy owned by Liechtenstein’s royal family. “We may see this downturn lasting well into 2010.” Goetti is underweight global equities.
Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures slipped 1.9 percent before a report that will probably show service industries shrank in November at the fastest pace on record, sinking the economy deeper into what may become the worst recession in decades.
Separately, an ADP Employer Services report may indicate that companies cut an estimated 205,000 jobs in November, the most since the 2001 recession, according to the median average of a economists surveyed by Bloomberg.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 1.2 percent today as GST Holdings Ltd., a Chinese fire-alarm maker, and China Mobile Ltd. rallied.
Withstanding Recession
Stocks worldwide will withstand a “full-blown” global recession, according to UBS AG. The S&P 500 may jump to 1,300 by the end of 2009, a 53 percent rally from its current level, New York-based strategist David Bianco wrote in a report dated yesterday.
U.S. stocks climbed yesterday, rebounding from the market’s worst tumble since October, after General Electric Co. announced plans to maintain its dividend and the Federal Reserve extended terms of three emergency loan programs. GE jumped 14 percent, while Wells Fargo & Co., Bank of America Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. advanced at least 9 percent.
Bankruptcy ‘Not an Option’
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi yesterday said she believes either Congress or the Bush administration will step in to aid domestic automakers because bankruptcy is “not an option.”
National benchmarks slid in 14 of the 17 western European markets that were open. The FTSE 100 lost 1 percent, as Stagecoach Group Plc slipped after forecasting tough times ahead. France’s CAC 40 dropped 1.9 percent, led by Electricite de France SA after it bid $4.5 billion for half of Constellation Energy Group Inc.’s nuclear power business. Germany’s DAX slid 2.1 percent.
In the U.K., consumer confidence deteriorated in November to the weakest in at least four years as unemployment jumped and banks curtailed credit, Nationwide Building Society said today.
In efforts to curb the slowing economy, economists predict European Central Bank policy makers will cut their benchmark interest rate by a half percentage point this week. The Bank of England will probably lower its key rate by 1 percentage point, according to a Bloomberg survey. Both central banks are scheduled to announce their decisions tomorrow.
Infineon declined 22 percent to 1.285 euros after saying it sees full-year 2009 sales down at least 15 percent from this year and reported a 763 euros fourth-quarter net loss, missing analysts’ estimates for a 321 million loss.
Research In Motion
ASML, Europe’s largest maker of semiconductor equipment, lost 4.1 percent to 10.685 euros. Nokia, the world’s biggest maker of mobile phones, declined 3.4 percent to 10.51 euros.
Research In Motion, whose BlackBerry competes against Apple Inc.‘s iPhone, lost 1.4 percent to $36.50 in Germany. Profit rose to no more than 83 cents a share in the quarter ended Nov. 29, missing a company forecast of as much as 97 cents. The results were preliminary, with the full financial report due on Dec. 18.
Stagecoach fell 4.7 percent to 163.5 pence after the owner of the U.K.’s biggest rail franchise predicted tougher economic times ahead. The company said it may cut jobs as the slowdown begins to threaten passenger numbers.
Analysts have slashed earnings estimates this year as economies from Germany and the U.K. to the U.S. slip into recession. Profit for companies in the Stoxx 600 will slide 13 percent in 2008, compared with 11 percent growth forecast at the start of the year, the data show.
Trailing Expectations
Since Oct. 7, quarterly earnings for the 329 companies in the Stoxx 600 that reported results declined 15 percent on average, trailing expectations by 6 percent, Bloomberg data show.
EDF slumped 5.6 percent to 42.06 euros after the world’s biggest operator of nuclear reactors bid for half of Constellation’s nuclear business to expand in the U.S. and thwart a rival bid from billionaire Warren Buffett. Constellation agreed earlier this year to be bought by Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co. for $4.7 billion.
GST surged 38 percent to HK$2.62 after United Technologies Corp. offered to buy the remaining 71 percent of the company it doesn’t already own for HK$1.9 billion ($245 million). The stock resumed trading today after being suspended since Nove. 10.
China Mobile climbed 3.2 percent to HK$72.55. State radio said the country will invest a total of 800 billion yuan ($116 billion) to provide 3G mobile services, and issue three licenses by the end of the year.
To contact the reporter on this story: Adam Haigh in London at ahaigh1@bloomberg.net