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President-elect Joe Biden speaks to reporters as he arrives at The Queen theater to meet virtually with the United States Conference of Mayors on Nov. 23, 2020, in Wilmington, Delaware.
European stocks rose on Tuesday, buoyed by optimism that vaccines will end the coronavirus pandemic, as well as signs of an orderly transition in the U.S.
Though down 6% year-to-date, the Stoxx Europe 600 SXXP, +0.58% rose 0.6%. Investors again bid up prices of oil producers including Total FP, +4.97% and BP BP, +7.00%, continuing a streak in which the Stoxx oil and gas sector SXEP, +3.71% has jumped 31% over the last month.
The German DAX DAX, +0.84%, French CAC 40 PX1, +1.17%, and U.K. FTSE 100 UKX, +0.87% each registered gains.
Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average YM00, +0.91% rose 246 points, after a 328-point gain for the blue chips on Monday. Futures on the Russell 2000 RTY00, +1.22% outperformed those of the Nasdaq-100 NQ00, +0.36%, a sign of the preference for hard-hit small- and value stocks over the technology giants that have surged during the pandemic.
“The likely wide availability of a COVID-19 vaccine in the second half of 2021 underpins our expectation of a strong economic recovery next year following early weakness,” said Bénédicte Lowe, cross-asset strategist at BNP Paribas. “At the same time, monetary policy is likely to remain exceptionally accommodative. We expect this, along with an expansionary fiscal stance, to support economic activity.”
Election risk was further reduced as the head of the General Services Administration told the Biden team that the transition can formally begin, a move President Donald Trump endorsed in a tweet. President-elect Joe Biden is expected to formally name Janet Yellen, the former Federal Reserve chair who presided over an era of low interest rates and stock-market gains, as his Treasury secretary nominee.
Germany’s closely watched Ifo index fell to 90.7 points in November, compared with a downwardly revised 92.5 points in October, though it marginally beat economist expectations.
A sign of the optimism in markets came as catering company Compass Group CPG, +4.76% rose 4%, after reporting a 78% drop in fiscal year ending Sept. 30 adjusted earnings per share, and didn’t pay a final dividend. Rival Sodexo SW, +5.30% also advanced.
Pets at Home PETS, -8.26% shares slumped 8% after the pet supplies seller reported a 5% decline in underlying pretax profits for the first half. The stock is still up 38% this year.