By Sara Sjolin, MarketWatch
LONDON (MarketWatch) -- Europe's benchmark stock index was on
track for the lowest close since early May on Thursday, with
banking turmoil in Portugal sending the financial sector across
Europe sliding, and as disappointing French and Italian
industrial-production highlighted concerns about euro-zone
growth.
The Stoxx Europe 600 index slid 1.3% to 335.62, setting it on
track for a fifth straight day in the red.
Leading losers in the pan-European index, shares of Fugro NV
tanked 19% after the oil-services company issued a profit warning
for the first half of the year.
Banco Espirito Santo SA tumbled 17%, adding to a 4.7% loss on
Wednesday, when news that parent company Espirito Santo
International delayed coupon payments on some short-term debt sent
shivers through Portugal's financial sector. Espirito Santo
Financial Group SA , the controlling shareholder of BES, on
Thursday suspended trading in its own shares and bonds.
Portugal's PSI index slumped 4.4% to 6,091.38, poised to close
at its lowest level since October.
The yield on 10-year Portuguese government bonds climbed 21
points to 3.97%, according to electronic trading platform
Tradeweb.
"The event has hit European financials like a torpedo and has
revived investors' darkest nightmares about Europe," said Peter
Garnry, head of equity strategy at Saxo Bank, in a note.
Shares of Banco Popolare SC shaved off 4.1% in Milan, Banca
Monte dei Paschi di Siena SpA dropped 4.2%, Banco de Sabadell SA
traded 4.3% lower in Madrid, and Commerzbank AG lost 3.4% in
Frankfurt.
The euro (EURUSD) was also weak, sliding to $1.361, from $1.364
on Wednesday.
Disappointing French and Italian data
Elsewhere, France's CAC 40 index lost 1.5% to 4,293.97, after
May industrial production data for the country dropped
unexpectedly, with manufacturing output sinking 2.3%.
Industrial-output data out of Italy were also disappointing,
showing production declined 1.2% in May on the month, marking the
biggest slide since November 2012. The FTSE MIB index slumped 2.1%
to 20,443.08.
The data reports come after German data earlier this week came
in on the weak side, stirring concerns of a growth slowdown in
Europe.
Germany's Economy Ministry said in its monthly report on
Thursday that the weakness in the spring, coupled with geopolitical
unrest, is hurting growth now, but that sentiment indicators
suggest the upward trend from earlier in the year will stay intact,
Reuters reported.
Germany's DAX 30 index is down 3.4% on the week so far and
traded 1.4% lower at 9,668.19 on Thursday.
Among movers, BNP Paribas SA gave up 2.8% after the French bank
late Wednesday pleaded guilty in U.S. federal court to a criminal
charge over its dealings with sanctioned countries.
Shares of Telecom Italia SpA gained 0.5% after J.P. Morgan
Cazenove lifted the company to overweight from neutral, with the
analysts saying it remains exposed to consolidation upside in both
Italy and Brazil.
BOE rate call
The U.K.'s FTSE 100 index fell 0.9% to 6,659.61, with little
reaction to the Bank of England's rate decision. The U.K. central
bank left its key lending rate at a record low of 0.5%, where it
has stood since March 2009, and maintained its asset purchases, the
centerpiece of its quantitative-easing strategy, at 375 billion
pounds ($642 billion). The no-change call was widely expected.
The pound (GBPUSD) traded at $1.7113, broadly unchanged from
before the BOE decision, down from $1.715 late Wednesday.
Miners were among decliners after Chinese trade data for June
surprised to the downside. BHP Billiton PLC (BHP) fell 1.2%, and
Rio Tinto PLC (RIO) gave up 1.5%.
On a more upbeat note in London, Burberry Group PLC (BURBY)
advanced 1.8% after the luxury-goods retailer reported a 12%
increase in same-store sales in the first quarter.
More must-reads for MarketWatch:
'Rotten rotation' could signal bull market living on borrowed
time
Fed plans to end bond purchases in October
Chinese hackers access U.S. personnel data
Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires