Investing.com – European equities hovered near flatlines on Wednesday, struggling for momentum as a bruising global technology rout and unyielding Federal Reserve hawkishness kept risk appetite firmly in check.
The pan-European index opened flat, while Germany’s was down 0.6%. France’s gained 0.1%. Italy’s and London’s declined 0.2%.
The listless morning session follows a sharp technology drawdown that dragged the regional benchmark to a more than one-week low on Tuesday.
Investors are increasingly confronting a reality check over sky-high valuations and massive corporate spending on artificial intelligence, all while calibrating how much economic expansion will be choked off by the Federal Reserve’s restrictive policy path.
“FOMO was replaced with a fear of being burnt if the now expected chunky earnings numbers don’t continue to surge,” Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell.
“Post-IPO stocks often enter a period of volatility as the market gets to grips with the new entrant, some investors rush to cash out, and others assess at what price they are willing to jump in.”
According to the CME FedWatch tool, fixed-income markets are currently pricing in roughly 50 basis points of total tightening by the end of the year, with a nearly 40% probability that the Fed will pull the policy trigger as early as July.
For continental investors, the monetary overhang delivers a complicated double whammy. Forward-looking indicators across the Eurozone continue to signal a structural economic slowdown.
Simultaneously, the European Central Bank remains backed into a corner, forced to sustain higher borrowing costs to counter the persistent inflationary hangover left by recent geopolitical disruptions in the Middle East.
British markets are pricing in an entirely separate layer of idiosyncratic risk. Aside from navigating a stagnating economy and a Bank of England that chose to stand pat on rates, UK investors are now digesting significant political upheaval following the sudden resignation of Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
Among individual stock share moves, jumped nearly 20% after rejecting a $16 billion bid by .
gained 4% after gaining Brazilian approval of merger with .
slumped 15% after a report said that the German government could cancel a key contract with the defense group in favor of TKMS.
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