European Factors to Watch -Shares seen gaining as U.S. deadline looms
Wed Oct 16, 2013 6:20am BST
LONDON, Oct 16 (Reuters) - European stocks were seen opening flat to higher
on Wednesday in what could be a volatile session of trade as investors retained
optimism that a deal could be struck to solve the U.S. debt crisis on the last
day before the deadline.
Financial spreadbetters expect Britain's FTSE 100 to open up 2 to 6
points, or as much as 0.1 percent higher, Germany's DAX to open 33 to
51 points higher, or as much as 0.6 percent, and France's CAC 40 to open
between 1 point lower to 13 points higher, as much as a 0.3 percent gain.
U.S. Senate leaders were still discussing a deal late on Tuesday aimed at
raising the debt limit and reopening federal agencies that have been closed for
two weeks. Senate aides said a deal was close but earlier hopes that a deal
could be announced late on Tuesday were not met.
European stocks rallied on Tuesday after Senate leaders made optimistic
noises that a deal would be done, however in Asia stocks slipped after House
attempts to get an agreement failed without a vote.
The Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives John Boehner could be more
likely to allow a vote over a Senate proposal in the House after his own
initiatives failed to get the support of his own party, analysts said.
"The latest headlines suggest a deal will be sealed," Stan Shamu, market
strategist at IG, said in a trading note.
"It now seems like Mr Boehner will allow a clean Senate bill vote in the
House which is a strong sign he has yielded."
While the UK's FTSE and French CAC look set to eke out small gains at best,
the German DAX is set to lead European indexes higher. A gain at the open would
see the German blue-chip index post fresh record highs for a second day running.