The EU Stock Exchanges are slowing down, despite the rebound in industrial production (+0,6) after the crash in September. TO Milano, the worst place, the Ftse Mib index lost 1,52% just under 19 points (18.894). Down too Paris (-0,39%), Frankfurt (-0,5%) And Madrid (-0,39%). London drops by 0,11%.
They weigh on the price lists fines to five major banks for alleged foreign exchange deals: UBS, Citigroup, HSBC, Royal Bank of Scotland and JP Morgan, totaling 2,73 billion euros, following a scandal that rocked the world's largest market.
Piazza Affari accentuated the descent afterwards the bot auction: the Treasury placed 6,5 billion euro of 12-month BOTs this morning at a rate of 0,335%, up from 0,301% of the previous issue.
Go back down the Petroleum: Brent loses 0,5% to 80,9 dollars a barrel, Wti to 77,2 dollars (-0,9%).
Strong decline in stock Enel (-3,5%), after the publication of the results and the announcement that the objective of reducing the debt to 2014 billion euro will not be achieved in 37.
Conversely, I leap forward by Mediaset (+8%) later the results and indications recovery from Spain: this morning Equita raised its recommendation to buy.
Also Moncler (+3,7%) is up sharply after the data for the quarter. The upswing of oil continues Saipem (+0,9%), while Eni drops by 1,3%. Telecom Italy salt of 0,7%.
The negative notes are concentrated on the banks, starting with the Popolari, after the quarterly reports. Overall, a picture emerges of low growth in revenues in the face of a financial solidity achieved under the pressure of the European exam. The worst is Banca Popolare dell'Emilia Romagna (-4%).
Unicredit still down by 2,6%, Understanding -1% MontePaschi -1,8%. It's still: Banco Popolare loses 2,4% e Pop.Milan drops by 3,2%, Mediobanca -1,1%. Where's Banca is up 1,8%.
On the industrial front, fca gains 1,5%: CEO Sergio Marchionne said that the Ferrari IPO will be in the second or third quarter of 2015.
Pirelli -1,7%: a conference call will be held today in view of a five-year euro bond issue, aimed at the early refinancing of maturing debt. Bnp leader as global coordinator, supported by Intesa Sanpaolo, Bank of America, Société Générale and Unicredit.