由于投资者担心巴黎袭击事件所造成的影响,本周一,欧洲旅游公司股票暴跌。航空公司股价跌幅较大,法国航空和英国航空所属的IAG公司股价分别下跌5%和3%。法国雅高酒店集团下跌5%。
美国、伦敦和法兰克福的股市都已从暴跌中恢复。但在巴黎,Cac 40指数收盘时下降了0.08%。
由于投资者将资金投向更为安全的传统领域,黄金价格上涨1%。在华尔街,三大指数在最终收盘时涨幅均超过1%。
美国罗杰欧期货公司董事总经理约翰·布雷迪称:“对于这类事件,市场已经慢慢地拥有了免疫力”。
很多分析家预测周一旅游休闲股将会大幅下跌,因为市场会首先对上周五的巴黎袭击事件作出反应。
英法海底铁路隧道运营商Eurotunnel Group的股票下降3%。巴黎戴高乐机场和奥利机场所属的巴黎夏尔·戴高乐机场约下降4%,而LVMH以及Gucci所属的开云集团下降约1%。
廉价航空公司易捷航空在早盘交易中下跌3%左右,但收盘时跌幅为0.39%。同样的,瑞安航空公司在早盘中下跌3%,收盘时达到1.43%。
但很多分析家相信巴黎恐怖袭击事件对全球经济的影响是短暂的。IHS环球透视的经济学家Howard Archer指出:“这类事件造成巨大的恐慌,这的确非常可怕,但经济都能很快得到恢复。最后的最后,人们还是不得不继续生活下去。”(中国进出口网)
Shares in Europe's travel and tourism companies suffered heavy falls on Monday as investors worried about the impact of the Paris attacks. Airlines were among the big fallers, with Air France and British Airways owner IAG down 5% and 3% respectively. French hotel group Accor lost 5%.
Stock markets in the US, London and Frankfurt all closed up after recovering from early falls. But in Paris the Cac 40 index finished down 0.08%.
The price of gold rose 1% as investors sought the safety of traditional havens. On Wall Street, all of the three main indexes eventually ended the day over 1% higher.
"Markets are slowly becoming more and more immune to these types of events," said John Brady, managing director at R.J.O'Brien & Associates.
Many analysts had forecast that travel and leisure shares would be the big losers on Monday as markets got their first chance to react to Friday's attacks.
Eurotunnel Group, operator of the Channel Tunnel rail link, fell 3%. Aeroports de Paris, the operator of Paris' Charles de Gaulle and Orly airports, was almost 4% lower, while LVMH and Gucci-owner Kering fell nearly 1%.
Budget airline Easyjet fell about 3% in early trading, but closed 0.39% down. Ryanair also fell around 3% in the morning, and closed 1.43% lower.
But many analysts believe the wider economic impact of the Paris shootings will be short-lived. "As horrific as these events are - and this is truly awful - economic activity does tend to be pretty resilient. At the end of the day, people have to get on with their lives," said Howard Archer, an economist at IHS Global Insight.