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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Miners push European shares to 29-mth closing high

17:50, Monday 14 February 2011

* FTSEurofirst 300 (E3X.FGI - news) up 0.3 pct

* Commodity (COMIN.NX - news) stocks gain on China import data

* Banks (SBK.NX - news) lower ahead of sector results

LONDON, Feb 14 (Reuters) - European shares hit a 29-month closing high on Monday, with miners up after Chinese trade data highlighted strong demand for raw material and as talk of easing inflation in the country capped fears of further tightening.

The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index of top shares closed 0.3 percent higher at 1,177.86 points, its highest close since early September 2008.

The index, up 3 percent this month, has rebounded almost 83 percent since hitting a record low in March 2009.

Miners in the STOXX Europe 600 basic resources index rose 1.6 percent as copper prices neared record highs after data showed a fall in China's trade surplus to a nine-month low, following surprisingly strong imports, notably of copper.

"The import data reaffirms the growth story in China and helps to give confidence in mining companies that interest rate rises are not going to suppress metal demand in the medium term," said Joshua Raymond, market strategist at City Index.

Traders also said there was talk China's consumer price index (CPI (Berlin: CEJ.BE - news) ) may have risen 4.9 percent in the year to January, well below the forecast of 5.3 percent, adding that might be because of weighting changes in the CPI.

"Inflation has been the major worry and there has been a fear of monetary overkill, but until the (inflation) data is released (on Tuesday) we could see a bit of volatility," said Heino Ruland, strategist at Ruland Research in Frankfurt.

Share (LSE: SHRE.L - news) price gains were kept in check by falls in heavyweight banking stocks ahead of sector earnings results due this week. Societe Generale (Paris: FR0000130809 - news) and BNP Paribas (BNPQF.PK - news) , which report this week, both shed around 1.2 percent while Lloyds Banking Group fell 1.7 percent.

Bucking the trend, Credit Suisse (CSMA - news) gained 1.9 percent after the Swiss bank said it will issue 6 billion Swiss francs ($6.2 billion) of contingent convertible capital bonds, or CoCos, to satisfy stricter capital rules. [ID:nLDE71D039]

ARM Holdings (LSE: ARM.L - news) rose 6.6 percent as traders cited bullish notes from Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS - news) and Morgan Stanley (DWDF.EX - news) on its outlook. Nearly all the world's mobile phones and tablets use the company's low-power technology.

France's Thales (Hamburg: CSF.HM - news) rebounded from earlier losses to rise 4.6 percent, as investors brushed aside a profit warning from the defence company. [ID:nLDE71D0BM]

Cementing expectations of a pick-up in merger and acquisition activity, British energy services provider John Wood Group surged 13.9 percent after U.S. conglomerate General Electric bought a unit of the company for $2.8 billion.

(Reporting by Joanne Frearson;Editing by David Hulmes,sourced:resuters)

Tags:FTSEurofirst, Commodities, European market, shares, Chinease trade data, strong demand, raw materials, STOXX Europe, traders, Credit Suisse, ARM Holdings, Goldman Sachs Group Inc.,Thales, John Wood group, General Electric.

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