LONDON — European markets closed slightly higher on Friday, rounding out a positive week after a deluge of key policy decisions from major central banks.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 index ended
up 0.1%, having given back earlier gains of around 0.5%. Mining stocks climbed
1.3% while telecoms dropped 0.8%.
It gained 0.91% on the week in its fifth consecutive week of
gains.
A day earlier, on Thursday, the European blue-chip index hitits highest point since January 2022.
Wednesday saw the U.S. Federal Reserve keep
interest unchanged in a range between 5.25% and 5.5%, but risk sentiment in
markets was boosted as the central bank revealed that policymakers were
penciling in at least three
rate cuts next year.
On Thursday, both the Bank of England and
the European
Central Bank also kept their respective interest rates
unchanged, but the former pushed back against market expectations by retaining
its hawkish guidance that monetary policy is “likely
to need to be restrictive for an extended period of time.”
Alongside its decision, the ECB revised down its growth and
inflation forecasts for the euro area and announced plans to speed up the
shrinking of its balance sheet.
U.S.
stocks were mixed on Friday after the Dow Jones Industrial
Average notched a fresh record high, as the index heads for its best weekly
winning streak since 2019.
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