International stocks trading in New York closed higher on
Monday. The Bank of New York index of American depositary receipts
rose 0.63% to 155.06. The European index increased 0.54% to 151.58,
the Asian index improved 0.68% to 152.90, the Latin American index
rose 1% to 301.31 and the emerging markets index increased 1.21% to
303.10. Among the companies with shares that actively traded was
HSBC Holdings PLC (HSBC, HSBA.LN, 0005.HK).
HSBC Holdings PLC (HSBC, HSBA.LN, 0005.HK) on Monday reported a
drop in first-half net profit as business slowed in investment
banking and some of its key Asian markets. Chairman Douglas Flint
said the ramping up of a regulatory crackdown on banks is spooking
its managers from taking normal business risks, as the bank blamed
part of a fall in first-half profit on high compliance costs. Chief
Executive Stuart Gulliver said the outlook is broadly positive,
though, for the rest of the year, and that an expected rise in U.S.
interest rates should provide a boost. Shares rose 1.6% to
$53.70.
Ecopetrol SA (EC, ECOPETROL.BO, ECP.T) showed a modest bounce
Monday after hitting a four-year low on Friday. Even as global oil
prices have remained high, Colombia's state-run oil company last
week reported an 18% drop in second-quarter earnings, pointing to
rebel attacks on transportation infrastructure that cut production
as well as a weeks-long shutdown of a key pipeline when an
indigenous community blocked repair crews trying to fix the damaged
line. Shares rose 1.4% to $33.80.
European Union competition regulators cleared Siemens AG's
(SIEGY, SIE.XE) 785 million British pounds ($1.3 billion)
acquisition of Rolls-Royce Holdings PLC's civil energy operations
Monday, a deal aimed at pushing the German engineering firm further
into a segment that already dominates its business. Siemen's shares
rose 4 cents to $120.99.
The People's Bank of China continues its love affair with the
Italian stock market, this time taking a 2.1% share in Telecom
Italia SpA (TI), according to Italy's stock market regulator
Consob. "Probably the Chinese have just seen a good opportunity to
buy a cheap European telecom stock and they took it," said a
London-based analyst. Telecom Italia was controlled by a holding
company called Telco for years. But shareholders Intesa Sanpaolo
(ISP.MI), Assicurazioni Generali (G.MI), Mediobanca (MB.MI) and
Telefonica (TEF, TEF.MC) all agreed to dissolve it. The Italian
shareholders have repeatedly said that they could sell their stakes
after the dissolution of Telco. Telecom Italia shares rose 2.6% to
$11.65.
Write to Tess Stynes at tess.stynes@wsj.com
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