European stocks were tracking heavy losses in Asian markets on Thursday, as the coronavirus death toll and number of infected climbed and concerns grew over how the fallout could dent the Chinese economy.
Virus worries overshadowed a scattering of positive earnings news and a corporate reshuffle that sent shares of Hennes & Mauritz climbing.
The Stoxx Europe 600 index SXXP, -0.70% fell 0.6% to 416.96, but off session lows after gaining 0.4% on Wednesday. The French CAC 40 PX1, -1.21% led the regional indexes lower, down 1%, while the German DAX 30 index DAX, -0.92% fell 0.8%.
The FTSE 100 index UKX, -0.70% eased 0.6% to 7,441.13 and the pound GBPUSD, -0.0614% slipped 0.2% to $1.2994 ahead of a knife-edge Bank of England interest rate decision on Thursday.
Read: Bank of England rate call may come down to what Chicago Fed President thinks
Chinese authorities on Thursday lifted the death toll to 170 and said more than 7,700 people were infected. Markets will be closely watching the outcome of a World Health Organization panel that will meet on Thursday to reassess the global threat of the coronavirus and decide whether it needs to be declared an international emergency.
Asia led the way lower, as Taiwan stocks Y9999, -5.75% reopened after the Lunar New Year holiday to a nearly 6% loss, the biggest daily percentage decline since October 2018. U.S. stock futures were also lower.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said on Wednesday that the U.S. economy is in good shape, as the central bank left a key interest rate unchanged. But he said the Fed is closely monitoring the severity of the deadly coronavirus and potential disruption to the global economy.
Coronavirus headlines vied for attention with a clutch of earnings and corporate news across Europe. Topping the Stoxx 600 gainer’s list, shares of H&M HM.B, +9.64% climbed nearly 9% after the Swedish retailer’s chief executive Karl-Johan Persson stepped down in a board reshuffle that took markets by surprise. The retailer posted a forecast-beating rise in net profit and higher sales.
Chief Operating Officer Helena Helmersson will take over as CEO, and analysts at Citigroup said she would continue Persson’s work of making H&M “relevant for the future.”
Also rising were shares of Unilever ULVR, +1.34% UL, -2.14%, which gained 1.6% as the consumer-goods group posted a fall in net profit and said it would consider options for its global tea unit.
Shares of Deutsche Bank DB, +1.15% rose 1% after the German lender reported its third-straight quarterly loss and a revenue drop. It also swung to a €5.3 billion ($5.8 billion) loss in 2019, due to the costs of a broad restructuring, but the bank also saw a rise in revenue for its fixed-income business.
Roche Holding ROG, +0.45% shares rose 1.2% after the Swiss pharmaceutical giant reported higher profit and sales and said it sees further growth this year.
Leading the downside for European stocks was the oil sector, with crude prices CL00, -1.74% under pressure on Thursday and disappointing earnings from Royal Dutch Shell Group RDS, -2.25% RDSA, -3.12% not helping. The oil giant reported a sharp profit fall in the fourth quarter, weighed by lower realized oil, gas and liquefied natural gas prices.
Also falling, shares of Diageo DGE, -2.19% dropped 1.3% after the drinks maker said net profit fell and full-year organic net sales guidance will be at the lower end of its midterm guidance.
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