This Morning's Top Eurozone Movers

Published in Investing on 18 June 2012

The DAX, CAC 40 and IBEX 35 respond to the Greek elections.

The outcome of the weekend's Greek parliamentary elections had a short-lived effect on many European shares this morning.

News that the broadly pro-bailout New Democracy party had secured a slim victory initially pushed every market throughout the eurozone higher. At the open, the Athens General Index (INDEX: GD.AT) surged 7% while Germany's DAX (INDEX: ^GDAXI), France's CAC 40 (INDEX: ^FCHI) and Spain's IBEX 35 (INDEX: ^IBEX) had each gained more than 1%.

However, by mid-morning, the early enthusiasm for European shares had dwindled, with the Greek bourse trading 5% higher and other bourses slipping into flat or negative territory. News that the yield on 10-year Spanish government bonds had topped 7% suggested some traders believed the eurozone's wider problems had not been resolved.

Within Greece, banks led the charge, with EFB Eurobank Ergasias surging 15% and National Bank of Greece rallying 13%. Sizeable gains were spread throughout the Athens market, with Autohellas leaping 12%, Hellenic Telecommunications jumping 11% and Terna Energy advancing 10%. Despite these healthy moves, the Greek market has still lost 11% this year and is 51% down on its level from 12 months ago.

The reaction to the Greek elections was somewhat muted in Germany, with the motor sector proving to be a somewhat surprising feature in morning trade. Companies supporting the DAX early on with 2%-or-so gains included BMW (ETR: BMW), Daimler (ETR: DAI) and Volkswagen (ETR: VOW). Up 6%, the German market remains the only major eurozone bourse to have stayed in positive territory this year.

Elsewhere, Spanish banks fell after the country's central bank admitted bad loans as a proportion of total loans at Spanish lenders had increased during April. Banking shares in the firing line included Bankia, down 6%, Banco Popular Espanol, down 4%, and Banco Santander, down 2%.

The selling in Spain hit shares in the eurozone's other major worry, Italy, this morning. Early Italian casualties included Enel (BIT: ENEL), which slumped 8%, Parmalat (BIT: PLT), which dived 6% and A2A (BIT: A2A), which fell 5%.

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> Maynard Paton does not own any shares mentioned in this article.

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