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Europe: Shares end May higher as trade uncertainty persists

Europe: Shares end May higher as trade uncertainty persists

Business Times2 days ago

EUROPEAN shares closed higher on Friday (May 30), rounding off the month with gains in a still uncertain trade environment as investors assessed the latest developments in US President Donald Trump's tariff plan.
The continent-wide Stoxx 600 index ended 0.1 per cent higher, brushing off a temporary reinstatement of the most sweeping Trump's tariffs on Thursday, a day after another court ordered an immediate block on them.
However, the benchmark index pared most gains after Trump said on Friday that China had violated an agreement on tariffs and issued a new threat to get tougher with Beijing, without revealing details.
'It is a whole different situation that we are going to be in... it's longer and slower and more complicated,' said Jochen Stanzl, chief market analyst at CMC Markets, pointing to the developments on the tariff front.
The index still posted its first monthly advance in three, rising about 4 per cent, while also ending the week higher, as investors capitalised on Trump's decision to postpone tariffs on the EU, opening the door for Brussels to produce a trade deal with Washington and recent US fiscal concerns that sent investors flocking to assets outside the US.
On the day, most sectors were higher, with utilities and healthcare shares up 0.8 per cent each.
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Construction and materials stocks were at the bottom, down 1 per cent.
'This is very much driven by momentum and some fear of missing out... investors over the past few months have been trained to buy the dip to some extent,' said Stanzl.
Europe's aerospace and defence index was the top winning sector for the month, up about 14 per cent, as dimming hopes of a truce between Russia and Ukraine persuaded investors to buy ammunition stocks.
Germany's Dax 40 ended 0.3 per cent higher. Data showed German inflation eased further in May, bringing it closer to the European Central Bank's 2 per cent target and bolstering the case for an interest rate cut next week.
Another dataset showed German retail sales fell by 1.1 per cent in April compared with the previous month.
M&G gained 5.5 per cent after it said Japanese life insurer Dai-Ichi Life Holdings will take a 15 per cent stake in the British insurer and asset manager as part of a strategic deal.
French pharmaceutical company Sanofi fell 4.8 per cent to a more than one-year low after its experimental drug Itepekimab failed to meet certain conditions.
Carrefour fell 6 per cent to the bottom of the Stoxx 600 as the French food retailer traded without entitlement to its latest dividend payout on Friday. REUTERS

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And tenants will flock to be in malls with high visitorship. Four, some F&B operators are mini-anchors for malls and thus well-placed to secure choice spots on favourable terms. Mall owners who value having the right tenant mix might pursue certain F&B brands or concepts to help position their property and draw visitors. Equally, an owner of a row of shophouses may be keen to lure the right F&B operator who can bring visitor traffic to the said properties. In short, sought-after F&B operators are in a strong bargaining position to secure choice spots. Five, intense competition among F&B players can result in players fighting hard to snare certain spots by offering high rents. For example, many F&B operators may seek to be in the most prime area of a popular mall or to have presence in an established dining enclave that has buzz. Thus, when choice F&B spaces become available, landlords are in the sweet spot of choosing among strong players who dangle juicy rents. 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