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Germany's stock market climbs after vote surprise, euro drops

Berlin - Germany's stock market rose on Monday, as traders brushed off inroads made by the country's hard-right opposition party in national elections.

"While Germany looks set for lengthy coalition negotiations... we don't expect political uncertainty to materially dent business sentiment or economic growth" in Europe's biggest economy, said Stephen Brown, economist at Capital Economics research group.

"September's fall in German... business sentiment still leaves it pointing to very strong GDP growth," the expert said. 

Investors had much to digest following the weekend break, with a key survey showing a dip in German business confidence and Moody's decision Friday to cut Britain's long-term credit rating, citing economic uncertainty sparked by complex Brexit negotiations and the likelihood of weaker UK public finances.

"While the pound seems to have taken Moody's UK credit rating downgrade in its stride, the FTSE seems a bit sorer following the news," said Spreadex analyst, Connor Campbell. 

"However, there are a few things in play this Monday that makes it hard to gauge how much the downgrade is weighing on the UK index, with the German election results, and subsequent sterling gains, also contributing to the FTSE's latest trip below 7,300 points," he told AFP.

While a weaker euro gave a lift to share prices of German exporters on Monday, the stronger pound had the opposite effect on British multi-nationals.

Elsewhere on markets, oil prices diverged as dealers assess the outlook for OPEC production cuts.

Snap election in Japan

Earlier, stocks on Japan's main index rallied on a weaker yen as traders bet correctly on Prime Minister Shinzo Abe calling a snap election - but other Asian markets struggled following a weekend of tense exchanges between US President Donald Trump and North Korea's Kim Jong-Un. 

New Zealand's main stocks index meanwhile won 0.7% despite uncertainty following a weekend vote that left the country with a hung parliament.

Back in Europe, Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel clinched a fourth term in the election, but her victory was clouded by the entry into parliament of the hard-right AfD in the best showing for a nationalist force since World War II.

It comes as it was revealed on Monday that confidence among German businesses eroded slightly in September, with the Munich-based Ifo institute's closely-watched business confidence index falling to 115.2 points this month, a 0.7-point drop compared with August and short of predictions from analysts surveyed by Factset.

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