Europe tumbles again as travel stocks pummelled
John E. Kaye
- Published
- News

On Friday, European shares resumed their slide as fears that the global spread of the coronavirus could trigger more curbs hit travel stocks, with the mood darkened by no new orders for plane maker Airbus last month.
The pan-European STOXX 600 fell 2.5%, taking down this week’s gains following the U.S. Federal Reserve’s emergency 50 basis point interest rate cut to shield the economy from the economic impact of the virus.
The travel & leisure index tumbled 3.8%, trading firmly in bear market territory, seen as a 20% drop from recent peak.
“If this really ramps up, we could see a lot more kitchen- sinking updates from the travel industry and airlines,” said Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG.
“What’s impressive about the current move is it probably understates the degree of disruption we could be facing across the U.S. and Europe.”
Passenger airlines could lose up to $113 billion in revenue as a result of the epidemic, the International Air Transport Association warned on Thursday.
Plane maker Airbus skidded 4.8% as it failed to win any new aircraft orders in February, further evidence of disruption across aviation industries due to the outbreak.
Automakers, miners, oil & gas companies and banking sectors were trading in bear market.
Deutsche Bank fell 3.9% and Commerzbank slid 5.8% as the flight to safety pushed Germany’s benchmark 10-year Bund yield to a six-month low, within striking distance of last year’s record lows.
The outbreak spread across the United States, surfacing in at least four new states on Thursday, while the UK recorded its first death.
In Italy, Europe’s worst-hit country, the death toll rose by 41 over the past 24 hours to 148, and the government said it would double the money pledged to help the economy cope with the epidemic.
Investors have almost fully priced in a 10 basis points cut by the European Central Bank next week. However, a recent Reuters poll of economists showed the ECB will not cut rates, underscoring the central bank’s limited policy options, given its deposit rate is already at a negative 0.50%.
Among other stocks, Italy’s Atlantia slid 6% after its motorway unit delayed the release of its 2019 results to give it more time to evaluate the impact of a new rule that changes the terms of its concession.
Infineon Technologies AG fell 2.5% after reports U.S. officials recommended blocking the German chipmaker’ s proposed $10 billion deal to buy Cypress Semiconductor Corp on security risks.
Reported by Sruthi Shankar
Sourced Reuters
For the Daily News and Aviation follow The European Magazine.
RECENT ARTICLES
-
Europe opens NanoIC pilot line to design the computer chips of the 2030s -
Zanzibar’s tourism boom ‘exposes new investment opportunities beyond hotels’ -
Gen Z set to make up 34% of global workforce by 2034, new report says -
The ideas and discoveries reshaping our future: Science Matters Volume 3, out now -
Lasers finally unlock mystery of Charles Darwin’s specimen jars -
Strong ESG records help firms take R&D global, study finds -
European Commission issues new cancer prevention guidance as EU records 2.7m cases in a year -
Artemis II set to carry astronauts around the Moon for first time in 50 years -
Meet the AI-powered robot that can sort, load and run your laundry on its own -
Wingsuit skydivers blast through world’s tallest hotel at 124mph in Dubai stunt -
Centrum Air to launch first European route with Tashkent–Frankfurt flights -
UK organisations still falling short on GDPR compliance, benchmark report finds -
Stanley Johnson appears on Ugandan national television during visit highlighting wildlife and conservation ties -
Anniversary marks first civilian voyage to Antarctica 60 years ago -
Etihad ranked world’s safest airline for 2026 -
Read it here: Asset Management Matters — new supplement out now -
Breakthroughs that change how we understand health, biology and risk: the new Science Matters supplement is out now -
The new Residence & Citizenship Planning supplement: out now -
Prague named Europe’s top student city in new comparative study -
BGG expands production footprint and backs microalgae as social media drives unprecedented boom in natural wellness -
The European Winter 2026 edition - out now -
Parliament invites cyber experts to give evidence on new UK cyber security bill -
EU sustainability rules drive digital compliance push in Uzbekistan ahead of export change -
AI boom triggers new wave of data-centre investment across Europe -
Lammy travels to Washington as UK joins America’s 250th anniversary programme

























