
European shares climb but Swiss stocks slump amid tariff fears
Switzerland's benchmark SMI index fell 0.8% as trading resumed after a long weekend, with the top 10 decliners on the STOXX 600 being Swiss stocks. The pan-European STOXX 600 index rose 0.5% after logging its biggest daily drop in more than three months on Friday.
Manufacturers in Switzerland, which counts the US as the top export market for its pharmaceuticals, watches, machinery and chocolates, warned on Friday that tens of thousands of jobs were at risk after being hit with the heavy rate. The Swiss levy is much steeper than the baseline tariff of 15% faced by European Union, Japan and South Korea.
Swiss pharma stocks Novartis and Roche slipped 0.6% and 1.4%, respectively, after US president Donald Trump sent letters to the leaders of 17 major pharmaceutical companies directing them to slash US prescription drug prices.
Swiss luxury companies Richemont and Swatch, among the most exposed to tariffs, fell almost 1% each with Swatch chief executive Nick Hayek calling on US president Karin Keller-Sutter to meet Mr Trump in Washington to negotiate a better deal.
"There was always this hope that 39% (tariff) is not going to stay, but it's so difficult to tell. This is not the kind of diplomacy or the administration that we are used to," said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior market analyst at Swissquote bank. "Each time Trump is not happy about something he's just slapping tariffs so we're really going through extremely unusual times."
Meanwhile, banks were a bright spot on the day with shares in lenders surging after the UK's Supreme Court overturned a ruling on motor finance commissions, easing fears among banks about a redress scheme some analysts had warned could run into the tens of billions of pounds. Bank of Ireland gained more than 2%, as did Barclays and Santander. Lloyds added 7.4% to the top of the STOXX 600 index, while Close Brothers surged 20% to the top of UK's midcap index.
Among individual stocks, UBS slipped 1.4% after the bank said it would pay $300m to resolve US mortgage securities cases related to misselling of mortage-linked investments.
Weaker-than-expected US jobs data for July and fresh tariffs on dozens of trading partners deepened concerns over the health of the US economy, roiling Wall Street and European stocks on Friday.
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