Germany's blue-chip DAX index extended its losing streak, closing 0.53% in the red on Thursday, while Delivery Hero (DHER.F) shares rose as it agreed to an acquisition offer from Uber Technologies (UT8.F).
Delivery Hero shareholders are being offered 41.50 euros per share under the ride-hailing giant's voluntary takeover bid, which values the food delivery platform at $14.8 billion, or $13.7 billion when adjusted for Uber's previous stake purchases.
"The weeks since Uber's potential takeover offer in May appear to have been used to put in place a deal structure addressing the transaction's regulatory and financial complexity, notably through the parallel carve-out to SSW Partners. With Uber's existing position and irrevocable tender commitments materially reducing acceptance risk, we raise our price target to EUR 41.50 [from EUR 33] and recommend shareholders tender their shares into the offer. SELL (before: HOLD)," mwb Research said. Delivery Hero was up 0.13% on Xetra, while Uber's Frankfurt-listed shares lost 0.17%.
On the geopolitical front, media reports claimed US President Donald Trump is weighing a potential expansion of military operations in Iran after a series of meetings with his top aides. The Wall Street Journal reported that proposed actions include escalating airstrikes, ground troop deployment to capture Iranian islands near the Strait of Hormuz, and bombing fortified sites suspected of housing covert nuclear operations.
"With Strait traffic contracting in recent days, the prospect of a regression to a pre-[memorandum of understanding] environment has spurred a resurgence in concern about inventory levels; we estimate that since the MoU, we have seen incremental crude exports from the Mideast Gulf equivalent to an additional ~40-day buffer for global inventories," RBC Capital Markets wrote.
Closer to home, the euro area recorded a trade deficit of 7.8 billion euros in May, against a revised deficit of 1.2 billion euros in April and the consensus estimate of 2.8 billion euros. Eurostat reported that exports of goods to the rest of the world ticked up 0.1% year over year to 243.6 billion euros, while imports rose 10% to 251.4 billion euros.