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China stimulus, trade progress help European shares mark strong start to decade

January 2, 2020 3:17 AM

By Susan Mathew

(Reuters) - Fresh monetary stimulus in Beijing and growing Sino-U.S. trade optimism helped European shares stay close to record highs on Thursday with banks and technology stocks leading a broad-based rally.

Riding the high tide across global markets, the pan-European stocks index STOXX 600 <.STOXX> jumped 0.9% after declining for two straight sessions when caution crept in about how long a U.S.-China trade truce would last.

But U.S. President Donald Trump brightened the mood on Tuesday by saying the Phase 1 agreement would be signed on Jan. 15 at the White House.

"There is an ongoing view from the market that 2020 may feel better than 2019 did," said Will James, deputy head of European equities at Aberdeen Standard Investments. "There is more of a value bias to the market (given the) positive noise around trade."

Lenders <.SX7P> were on a tear, up 1.9% at their highest in nearly eight months, followed by the technology sector <.SX8P> that was driven by gains in trade-sensitive chip stocks.

China-exposed mining <.SXPP> and auto shares <.SXAP> were also among the biggest gainers along with industrials which were lifted by a 2.3% jump in Airbus (NYSE: AIR) after it edged out Boeing (NYSE: BA) to become the world's biggest planemaker.

That lifted the wider French index <.FCHI> 1.1%. Bank-heavy Spanish <.IBEX> and Italian <.FTMIB> indices gained the most in the region, up around 1.4% each, while German shares <.GDAXI> posted their best day in one month, shrugging off figures that showed the manufacturing sector contracted further in December.

Euro zone stocks <.STOXXE> jumped 1.2% on Thursday despite latest data showing factory activity in the bloc contracting for the eleventh straight month.

The benchmark European STOXX 600 index ended last year with its biggest annual gain since the global financial crisis on easing recession fears and a loose monetary policy by some of the world's biggest central banks.

Signalling that it stood pat to boost a slowing economy, China's central bank on Wednesday lowered the reserve requirement ratio for banks for the eighth time since 2018, with the latest cut freeing up around 800 billion yuan ($115 billion).

London-listed shares <.FTSE> climbed 0.8%. The other key date this month for European markets will be Jan. 31 - the deadline for Britain's exit from the European Union. Higher volatility during this period will also stem from companies starting to report fourth-quarter results and expectations for 2020.

Missing out on the broader rally, Tullow Oil Plc shares fell 6.8% an on doubts over commercial viability of a reservoir in its newly struck oil well in offshore Guyana.

(Reporting by Susan Mathew, Sagarika Jaisinghani and Lisa Pauline Mattackal in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur and Lisa Shumaker)

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