FRANKFURT, Feb 9 ― European shares rose yesterday, led by economically sensitive cyclical sectors, as sentiment was lifted by hopes of a quicker recovery and multi-billion dollar deals in the region.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index rose 0.3 per cent adding to gains of 3.5 per cent in the previous week, in line with upbeat sentiment in global markets which saw Wall Street and an index of world shares hit all-time highs on stimulus hopes.

Dialog Semiconductor surged 16 per cent to its highest in over two decades and topped the STOXX 600 after Japanese chipmaker Renesas Electronics Corp agreed to buy the Frankfurt-listed chip designer for €4.9 billion (RM24 billion) in cash.

“There are many other European shares which had fallen out of favour for international investors and this (the deal) indicates that global investors particularly American, Japanese or Chinese investors are looking to invest in such names,” said Chris Bailey, European strategist at Raymond James.

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France's Veolia Environnement SA said it is launching an offer for all of waste and water management company Suez SA, valuing it €11.3 billion after dropping efforts to win the backing of the Suez board.

The French firms closed lower as new legal hurdles awaited the deal and amid a government warning of an increasingly hostile takeover battle.

Cyclical sectors including basic resources, banks and chemicals rose between 0.8 per cent and 2.2 per cent, and were among top gainers on the main index. Technology shares gained 1.5 per cent.

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The rollout of Covid-19 vaccines globally and increased M&A activity have helped reduce recent pessimism around European equities. The STOXX 600, however, has yet to reach pre-pandemic levels, about 5 per cent away from 2020 highs.

“We are underweight European equities,” said BlackRock strategists in a note.

“The market has relatively high exposure to financials pressured by low rates. It also faces structural growth challenges, even given potential for catch-up growth in a vaccine-led revival.”

Data from Germany showed industrial output stagnated in December as lockdowns to contain the Covid-19 pandemic held back the export-oriented manufacturing sector in Europe's largest economy.

Frankfurt's main index closed flat, retreating from record highs at the open.

This comes after data last week showed orders for German-made goods fell more than expected in December, ending a seven-month streak of positive data. ― Reuters