Portugal's stock market finished marginally in the red on Monday, with the PSI index ending the session down 0.08% in Lisbon. Selling pressure in the Industrials, Financials and Technology groups was the primary factor cited for the modest decline.
Market breadth favored decliners: 15 stocks fell versus 10 that advanced on the Lisbon Stock Exchange, while 5 issues finished unchanged. The session's top performer was Ibersol SGPS (ELI:IBS), which rose 3.17% - a gain of 0.38 points - to close at 12.38. The move took Ibersol to an all-time high intraday level.
Other notable winners included Galp Energia Nom (ELI:GALP), which added 2.33% or 0.43 points to finish at 18.91, and Ren Redes Energeticas Nacionais SGPS SA (ELI:RENE), up 1.35% or 0.05 points to close at 3.76.
On the downside, Teixeira Duarte (ELI:TDSA) was the weakest constituent, sliding 3.59% or 0.02 points to 0.43 at the close. Mota Engil SGPS SA (ELI:MOTA) declined 3.23%, down 0.16 points to 4.88, while Banco Comercial Portugues (ELI:BCP) fell 1.51% or 0.01 points to 0.89.
Commodities registered notable moves during the session. Brent oil for June delivery climbed 5.50%, gaining 4.97 to reach $95.35 a barrel. Crude oil for June delivery rose 5.84% or 4.82 to $87.41 a barrel. Precious metals moved in the opposite direction: the June Gold Futures contract decreased 1.29%, or 63.06, to trade at $4,816.54 a troy ounce.
Foreign exchange markets showed limited movement. EUR/USD was reported unchanged at 0.19% to 1.18, while EUR/GBP was unchanged 0.01% to 0.87. The US Dollar Index Futures was down 0.04% at 97.86.
Below are the key takeaways from the session and factors market participants may watch going forward.
- Market direction: The PSI closed slightly lower, with selling concentrated in Industrials, Financials and Technology sectors.
- Winners and losers: Ibersol reached an all-time high, while Teixeira Duarte, Mota Engil and Banco Comercial Portugues were among the largest decliners.
- Commodity moves: Oil prices surged in the session and gold fell, reflecting divergent moves across energy and precious metals markets.