BRUSSELS, July 14 — European stocks were hit by a selloff in technology shares today, after a drop overnight on Wall Street following fears of new coronavirus restrictions and a flare-up in US-China tensions.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index fell 1.3 per cent, with technology stocks dropping 3.2 per cent, on course for their biggest one-day selloff in over a month.

Shares in SAP SE, ASML Holding NV, Prosus NV and Infineon Technologies AG fell about 4 per cent, tracking overnight declines in US tech majors on worries that another lockdown in California to contain a surge of coronavirus infections may slow a US economic recovery.

“California is a tech haven, so this is going to have a disproportionate effect on tech stocks,” said Connor Campbell, markets analyst at SpreadEx.

Advertisement

Those fears also persisted in Asia with Hong Kong set to impose strict social distancing measures from today. The number of coronavirus infections around the world hit 13 million yesterday, according to a Reuters tally, climbing by a million in just five days.

“Markets are nervous about the trajectory of the economy,” said Paul Danis, chief global strategist at wealth manager Brewin Dolphin. “I suspect that we are going to have a wobble which will slow the pace of economic improvement, but it is not going to outright derail it.”

Germany’s ZEW research institute said the outlook for Europe’s largest economy remains largely unchanged in July versus the previous month.

Advertisement

The ZEW economic sentiment index was at 59.3 points in July after climbing to 63.4 points in June.

Meanwhile, Washington yesterday rejected China’s disputed claims to offshore resources in the South China Sea, a move that Beijing criticised as inciting tensions in the region.

German meal-kit delivery firm Hellofresh SE gained 0.3 per cent as it raised its full-year revenue forecast, while industrial technology group Hexagon AB jumped 4.9 per cent after forecasting second-quarter profit above market expectations.

Norwegian oil firm Aker BP ASA fell 3.4 per cent as crude prices fell, but the company beat second-quarter pre-tax profit expectations.

 

The world’s biggest watchmaker Swatch Group AG edged lower as it reported its first ever half-year loss, but Chief Executive Officer Nick Hayek said he looked forward to a quick rebound from the pandemic. — Reuters