Stocks – Europe To Edge Lower; Siemens Earnings in Focus

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By Peter Nurse

Investing.com – European stock markets are set to open a touch lower Wednesday, with investors happy to bank some of Tuesday’s healthy gains despite a positive tone to Asian markets. Overall sentiment remains fragile, but earnings from a raft of blue-chips such as Siemens , BNP Paribas (PA:) and Vodafone (LON:) may change that

At 02:30 ET (0730 GMT), the contract traded 36 points, or 0.3% lower, while the contract in the U.K. fell 5 points, or 0.1%. France’s were down just 1 point, or 0.1%. Futures on the pan-eurozone , dropped 6 points, or 0.2%.

On Tuesday, the cash index gained 1.8%, the cash index 1.8%, the cash index 1.6% and the cash equivalent 1.9%.

Germany’s Siemens (DE:) on Wednesday reported weaker-than-expected industrial profit during its first quarter as the industrial downturn hit its flagship digital industries business and its wind power unit suffered losses.

The largest industrial manufacturing company in Europe saw its industrial operating profit fall 30% to 1.43 billion euros ($1.58 billion), missing analyst forecasts for 1.88 billion euros in a consensus gathered by the company.

Elsewhere, BNP Paribas (PA:) posted a hefty 62% jump in fixed-income trading revenue in the fourth quarter, to 820 million euros ($905 million), after a rebound in rates and foreign exchange activity. This was way ahead of its release a year earlier, though fell short of the $1 billion generated in the previous quarter.

Overnight the blue-chip index posted modest gains, closing 0.9% higher, helped by the decision of The People’s Bank of China to pump hundreds of billions of dollars into the financial system this week to keep rates from rising and restore confidence.

And the expectation is that the PBOC will do more, probably lowering its key lending rate – the loan prime rate – on Feb. 20, when it next meets, and cutting banks’ reserve requirement ratios in the coming weeks.

Still, the coronavirus continues to claim victims, as the mainland China death toll increased to 490, while confirmed cases rose to 24,324, Chinese authorities reported Wednesday.

Turning back to Europe, economic data of note include services PMI numbers from a raft of European countries, with the eurozone number due at 04:00 AM ET (0900 GMT), and the U.K. equivalent 30 minutes later. The retail sales numbers for the eurozone at 05:00 AM ET (1000 GMT) will also be of interest.

On Wall Street, Walt Disney (NYSE:) impressed after reporting after hours that the number of subscribers to its new streaming service more than doubled in its first three months, to over 28 million.

On the flip side, Ford’s (NYSE:) fourth-quarter operating income sank by two-thirds, and it issued a lower-than-expected profit outlook for 2020, while Macy’s (NYSE:) announced plans to close 125 stores in an admission that online shopping has hit the department-store operator hard.

The spotlight could also be on eBay (NASDAQ:) Wednesday, after the Wall Street Journal reported that Intercontinental Exchange, the owner of the NYSE, has made a takeover offer for the online marketplace that could value it at more than $30 billion.

In the oil markets, futures recovered a little overnight from the one-year lows they hit on Tuesday, helped a little by a smaller-than-expected rise in U.S. inventories reported by the American Petroleum Institute.

AT 02:30 AM ET (0730 GMT), futures traded 0.5% higher at $49.84 and the international benchmark contract rose 0.6% to $54.28.