Previous Close | 18.00 |
Open | 18.00 |
Bid | N/A x N/A |
Ask | N/A x N/A |
Day's Range | 18.00 - 18.00 |
52 Week Range | 18.00 - 21.40 |
Volume | |
Avg. Volume | 2 |
Market Cap | 10.556B |
Beta (5Y Monthly) | 0.61 |
PE Ratio (TTM) | 18.82 |
EPS (TTM) | N/A |
Earnings Date | N/A |
Forward Dividend & Yield | 0.35 (1.93%) |
Ex-Dividend Date | Jul 21, 2021 |
1y Target Est | N/A |
"Including the consolidation of the Borsa Italiana Group, Euronext delivered more than 50% growth year on year in reported revenue, adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation) and adjusted net income," Chief Executive Officer Stephane Boujnah said in a statement. As the integration of the Milan bourse, which Euronext bought in a 4.4 billion euro ($4.6 billion) deal last year, progressed, the stock exchange operator reduced 2022 underlying costs expectations to 612 million euros and the amount of 2024 cumulated implementation costs to 150 million. The acquisition also led Euronext to achieve 15.2 million euros cumulated run-rate annual synergies and incur 31.4 million of cumulated implementation costs at the end of the quarter.
LONDON (Reuters) -The sudden fall in European shares driven by a brief crash in Nordic markets was caused by a single sell order trade by Citigroup Inc, people familiar with the matter told Reuters, and confirmed by Citi. The flash-crash, which caused European shares to suddenly fall on a day of holiday-thinned trading activity, involved an erroneous calculation relating to a Nasdaq Inc index involving Swedish companies, one source said. The Stockholm OMX 30 equity benchmark index was one of the hardest hit, falling by 8% at one point following a five-minute dive, before paring most of its losses to trade down 1.7% at 1229 GMT.
Nordic stocks fell sharply on Monday before partly recovering in what brokers Nordnet said was a "flash crash" triggered by a brief market panic. The Stockholm benchmark stock index, which at one point fell by 8%, was trading down 2.5% at 0854 GMT, while the bourses in Copenhagen and Oslo also experienced big falls. "We are looking into this as a matter of routine, there was no news in the market that could explain such a large move," Euronext Oslo spokesperson Cathrine Segerlund said.