European markets up but stock prices are subdued

Europe's markets edged up slightly, but stock price movements were subdued compared with recent days

Europe's markets edged up slightly, but stock price movements were subdued compared with recent days. Technology shares had to contend with a cut in forecasts at JDS Uniphase and a pessimistic statement from Intel.

However, one of the day's winners was software-maker SAP, up 2.6 per cent in late trading at €166.20. Mobile handset-maker Nokia's shares took a dip of 6 per cent at mid-session after a downgrade from Lehman Brothers was followed by renewed rumours that the company was about to issue a profit warning. Lehman Brothers downgraded Nokia from "buy" to "market perform" and lowered its price target from €30-€35 to €28, saying its move was based on comments from Samsung and Texas Instruments that Nokia was aggressively cutting its prices. Nokia's shares ended 2.8 per cent lower at €28.03.

Dutch optical cable company Versatel reported a lower than forecast loss for 2000, announced 300 job cuts and predicted strong revenue growth for 2001. Its shares initially jumped 5 per cent but later fell back to close unchanged at €11. The Dutch IT services company Landis fell sharply for a second day. ING Barings cut its recommendation on the shares from `buy' to `hold'. At the close they were down 13.5 per cent at €10.30, having fallen 13 per cent the day before.

German software company Gauss Interprise, listed on the Neuer Markt, leapt more than 20 per cent after the company said a fresh injection of funds should allow it to break even in the fourth quarter. The shares were 18.5 per cent up at €2.69 in late trade.

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German industrial group SGL Carbon fell 4.4 per cent to €59.40 after reporting a net profit of €9 million, well short of analysts' expectations. SGL, a leading producer of graphite electrodes for steel production, made a net loss of €38 million in 1999 amid provisions for price-fixing charges.