Electronic screens display the stock prices inside the Greek stock exchange in Athens. The Athens Composite Index erased earlier losses to trade 1.5% higher after the leader of Greece’s radical leftist party Syriza, Alexis Tsipras, told Reuters he wanted a negotiated debt relief solution with the European Union and to keep the country in the euro currency bloc.

Reuters

European stocks surged yesterday, with the market supported by a rise in Greek shares after the leader of the main opposition party said he was committed to keeping Greece in the euro should his leftist party take power next year.

A tentative rebound in oil, a dovish statement from the Federal Reserve and relative calm in Russian markets helped spur European shares to their strongest daily gain in three years.

The FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares closed up 3% at 1,356.23 points, its biggest percentage rise since November 2011, extending gains after Greek stocks reversed an early fall.

Among major markets, London’s benchmark FTSE 100 index rose 2.04% to close at 6,466 points. In Paris CAC 40 surged 3.35% to 4,249.49 points, while in Frankfurt the DAX 30 benchmark jumped 2.79% to 9,811.06 points.

The Athens Composite Index erased earlier losses to trade 1.5% higher after the leader of Greece’s radical leftist party Syriza, Alexis Tsipras, told Reuters he wanted a negotiated debt relief solution with the European Union and to keep the country in the euro currency bloc.

Greek markets have been knocked by the prospect of a general election if parliament fails to elect a new president by the end of the year, with the prospect of a Syriza victory in a popular vote raising questions over the country’s EU membership.

A poll on Wednesday showing that Syriza had extended its lead over the government party helped push the local equity index as much as 3% lower in early trade.

“The Greek election is maybe the elephant in the room over the festive period but we have already seen a significant risk premium built into equities so any favourable outcome is likely to be proceeded by a sizeable relief rally,” Jonathan Roy, partner at London-based Charles Hanover Investments, said.

Oil companies benefited from a short-lived rise in oil prices, as Brent crude jumped to $63% per barrel before falling back after European markets had closed.

Norway’s energy services firm Seadrill closed up 9%. The STOXX 600 Oil & Gas sector was up 2.7%, but remains down more than 18% since the beginning of October. Many of the stocks in the sector are heavily shorted and positioned for a squeeze higher, traders said.

“Oil stocks have been hard hit, so when sentiment on the sector starts to turn around, the first place for investors to look is those stocks that have been heavily beaten down,” Chris Beauchamp, market analyst at IG, said.

Financials added the most points to the index, after Fed Chair Janet Yellen told a news conference the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee was unlikely to hike rates for “at least a couple of meetings”, meaning April of next year at the earliest.

“The statement was dovish, and the rise in rates will not be as early as people had expected. Traders have pushed out their expectations for the first rate hike,” James Butterfill, global equity strategist at Coutts, said.

Alcatel-Lucent rose 8.7% on a report that it could merge with fellow telecom equipment firm Nokia.

Swisscom sank to the bottom of the FTSEurofirst 300, down 7.9% after news that French billionaire Xavier Niel had agreed to buy rival, private-equity-owned Orange Switzerland.

It was the only Swiss blue-chip stock in negative territory, with the Swiss SMI up 2.7 after the central bank unexpectedly cut interest rates.

 

 

 

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