The Ibex rises more than 1% and looks foward to 10,300 points
The Dow Jones and the S & P rose by 1% on Tuesday
- Asia has also lived a day of green numbers
- The UK and the EU have signed an agreement on the Brexit bill
The Ibex and the rest of European places are encouraged this Wednesday and go up 0.8% on average (the Ftse100 is unmarked with falls of 0.5%). The index revalorizes 1.36% at this time and leads the way to 10,300 (10,283 points). The spanish market has surpassed the first immediate resistance that it had in the 10,175 points and it seems that it is already looking towards the next brake, which does not appear until 10,600 points. The good closing of Wall Street of the past day (+ 1% of average) and the positive behavior of Asia support the selective, in addition to other multiple news highlighted in this session.
The four most relevant news at the start of this day come from very different areas and areas. On the one hand, the 'good news' of that agreement reached by the United Kingdom and the European Union (EU) on the Brexit bill, which could reach 64,000 million euros. The announcement of this agreement was announced on Tuesday at the last minute, the same day in which the Bank of England (BoE) published its Financial Stability Report and said that English banks have the capacity to resist a 'hard Brexit'.
On the other hand, that new missile launched by North Korea is news, a week after the president of the United States returned the Pyongyang regime to the list of "sponsors of terrorism". Kim Jong-Un has put an end to two months of inactivity and has launched a missile that, after reaching a record height, has ended in the Sea of Japan.
In third place, and in the business world, the news is undoubtedly the new operation of BBVA (+ 2.4%), which has sold its real estate business to Cerberus for 4,000 million euros. The entity has said that the operation will close in the second part of next year and that it will have a "slightly positive" impact on its attributed profit. This announcement comes a day after BBVA reported the sale of its subsidiary in Chile to Scotiabank for 1,850 million euros (with net capital gains of 640 million euros).