European shares end higher on dovish Fed, Entra leads gains

European stocks inch lower ahead of Powell's speech
European stocks inch lower ahead of Powell's speech Copyright Thomson Reuters 2021
Copyright Thomson Reuters 2021
By Reuters
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By Ambar Warrick and Sruthi Shankar

-European stocks rose on Friday after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell showed no signs the U.S. central bank will reduce a massive stimulus program, while real estate stocks were led higher by Norway's Entra after a major peer took a stake in the firm.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index closed 0.4% higher, with mining stocks up 1.9%, while real estate stocks added 1.5%.

The day's gains helped the STOXX 600 close 0.8% higher for the week, after trading flat for several days. Commodity-linked stocks were the best weekly performers, as they bounced back from steep losses.

Entra was the best performer on the STOXX 600, rising 4.6% as its peer Castellum bought 11.8% of shares in the firm from the government pension fund in Norway.

The STOXX 600 extended its gains after Powell's highly anticipated announcement, which reassured investors that programs which have flooded markets with liquidity for the past year will remain in place for the time being.

"Powell’s warning about the risks of premature tightening and repeated reference to “much ground to cover” to reach the Fed’s employment objective hint that the Fed may be on hold until Q4 at the earliest," said Matt Weller, global head of research at Forex.com.

U.S. stocks touched record highs after the announcement, while European stocks were less than a percent away from their peak, as investors looked past rising COVID-19 cases and concerns over slowing economic growth.

A survey showed French consumer confidence eased marginally in August, while morale amongst Italian businesses and consumers also fell this month.

The Delta variant of the coronavirus is only expected to have a limited impact on the euro zone economy, which remains on course for robust growth this year and next, European Central Bank Chief Economist Philip Lane said earlier this week.

Just Eat Takeaway.com, which owns GrubHub, fell 7.5% after the New York City Council approved legislation to license food-delivery apps and permanently cap commissions they can charge restaurants.

Just Eat was the biggest percentage loser on the STOXX 600 on Friday.

Norwegian fish farmer Salmar rose 2.5% after the company dropped plans to launch an 11.8 billion crowns ($1.29 billion) cash bid for rival Norway Royal Salmon (NRS). NRS shares fell 11.8%.

French auto parts maker Faurecia gained 2.7% to 42.07 euros after Citigroup hiked the price target on the company's stock to 56 euros from 41 euros.

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