© Archyde.com. An electronic board displays the German DAX index at the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, Germany, on Tuesday. Photograph: Archyde.com.
(Archyde.com) – European shares opened lower on Wednesday, led by heavy selling in Asian markets as the escalating energy crisis in the region and a persistent rise in global bond yields fueled fears of a recession.
The European index fell 0.8 percent by 0707 GMT to continue its decline for the fifth consecutive session, and the German index lost 0.9 percent in line with Wall Street, whose indices witnessed a further decline last night.
All sectoral indices declined, with the gas, oil, banking and basic resources sectors declining between 1 percent and 1.5 percent.
Technology stocks were pressured by a rise in 10-year yields by more than 4% to reach a 12-year high, in light of market fears that the Federal Reserve (the US central bank) will be forced to raise interest rates by more than 4.5 percent in its efforts to combat inflation.
The FTSE 100 index of London-listed shares fell 0.9 percent following Moody’s warned that Britain’s unfunded tax cuts would have a “negative” impact on the country’s credit situation.
Commerzbank fell 2.1 percent following the German bank said it would make 490 million euros (469 million) in operating profit in the third quarter following its Polish electronic banking unit booked additional provisions for its Swiss franc loans.
Media for Europe fell 2.2 percent following Italy’s major commercial broadcaster reported a 44 percent drop in operating profit in the first half of the year on the back of fixed sales and rising energy costs.
(Prepared by Noha Zakaria for the Arabic Bulletin – Edited by Suha Jado)