Home » today » Business » The decline in European equities continues for the sixth consecutive session

The decline in European equities continues for the sixth consecutive session

<div id="firstBodyDiv" data-bind-html-content-type="article" data-bind-html-compile="article.body" data-first-article-body="

The poor business results led to the company "Growth of bars"the largest house construction company in Great Britainto a wave of stock sales in the real estate sector.

And she was European equities It fell for a fifth consecutive session on Tuesday as investors worry about the prospects of a global economic slowdown and squeezing corporate profits due to the rise interest rates With central banks stepping up their battle against inflation.

actions move

Cursor dropped Stoke 600 European equities were up 0.2% at 07:06 GMT, in the sixth consecutive losing session, and the real estate and banking sector led the decline.

Philips shares plunged 8.1% after the Dutch company announced a 60% drop in its core quarterly profit.

The share has dropped Credit Suisse By 3.6%, after Bloomberg reported that the US Department of Justice was investigating the Swiss bank’s continued help to US clients to hide their assets from the authorities, 8 years after the bank paid a tax evasion transaction tax of 2.6 billion dollars.

Among the winners was LVMH, which rose 0.9% after the French luxury goods giant surpassed market expectations for third-quarter sales.

“>

Weak commercial results for Barat Developments, the largest home builder in the world Great Britainto a wave of stock sales in the real estate sector.

And she was European equities It fell for a fifth consecutive session on Tuesday as investors worry about the prospects of a global economic slowdown and squeezing corporate profits due to the rise interest rates With central banks stepping up their battle against inflation.

actions move

Cursor dropped Stoke 600 European equities were up 0.2% at 07:06 GMT, in the sixth consecutive losing session, and the real estate and banking sector led the decline.

Philips shares plunged 8.1% after the Dutch company announced a 60% drop in its core quarterly profit.

The share has dropped Credit Suisse By 3.6%, after Bloomberg reported that the US Department of Justice was investigating the Swiss bank’s continued help to US clients to hide their assets from the authorities, 8 years after the bank paid a tax evasion transaction tax of 2.6 billion dollars.

Among the winners was LVMH, which rose 0.9% after the French luxury goods giant surpassed market expectations for third-quarter sales.

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.