In the background, you can see that the Eiffel Tower and the hotel dome have invaded.
Photo by Alessandro Grussu | Moment | Getty Images
LONDON – European stocks were mixed on Monday as the market responded to the shocking resignation of French Prime Minister Sebastian Lecorne.
Pan-European Stoxx 600 It had little changed when the session was preliminarily closed, including five consecutive positive returns, including five consecutive positive returns last week.
France’s CAC40 The index cut some of its previous losses, falling 1.3% by about 1.3% after Lecorne resigned a few weeks after his appointment. The move sparks fresh political turmoil, followed by the collapse of the government before François Bailloux.
French banks were one of the people leading losses Societe Generale, BNP Pariva and Credit Agricoll When the market closed, it all fell more than 3%.
The yield on the French benchmark 10-year bond was last seen at 3.5709%, previously rising to a 10-day high of 3.5990%, but the euro fell about 0.3% at the end of the session to $1.1741.
Stocks Aston MartinMeanwhile, it fell 10% after luxury automakers issued profit warnings citing ongoing tariff pressure. Renault It lost about 1.6% after the French automaker reported that it plans to cut 3,000 jobs in finance, marketing and HR.
European cars have been mixed and erased previous profits Stellantis The multinational automaker is planning to invest around $10 billion in the US, with more than 3% rising amid reports of new manufacturing plants in Illinois and Michigan.
Avanza Bank Holding was one of the largest overall winners on Monday, adding 4.5% after Swedish online bank said its customer base has increased by more than 132,000 this year.
US stocks mostly rose Monday despite continued government shutdowns. Investors appeared to be curbing concerns about the closure, which originally delayed the release of key economic data, including a September employment report, from 2018.
Overnight in the Asia-Pacific market, Japan Nikkei 225 index After the country’s ruling Liberal Democrats elected Sanaetakachi as a new leader, positioned them to become the country’s first female prime minister, the country’s ruling Liberal Democrats over 4% to reach record highs.
