By Frank Prenesti
Date: Friday 06 Jun 2025
(Sharecast News) - European shares were flat at as investors eyed the very public breakup of the Donald Trump-Elon Musk bromance, which quickly descended into personal insult and threats over the US President's planned tax and spending Bill.
The pan-regional Stoxx 600 index was literally unmoved by the whole affair and France's CAC 40 was 0.12% lower. Germany's DAX fell 0.2% as domestic industrial production and exports in Germany both fell sharply in April, official data showed, missing forecasts.
According to Destatis, the Federal Statistical Office, industrial production declined 1.4%, or by 1.8% year-on-year. Markets had been expecting a 1% fall..
In an extraordinary escalation overnight the egotistical duo traded barbs, with Trump threatening to withdraw billions of dollars' worth of government contracts for Musk's companies after Musk claimed the president wouldn't have won a second term without his support.
Musk stands to lose billions in subsidies for his Tesla electric car business under Trumps plan for massive tax cuts - which will largely benefit the rich - and public spending, including medical programs for low income earners.
The spat was not without consequences as billions was wipe from the value of Tesla overnight, adding to the EV makers woes.
Musk's behaviour in his short-lived role as a government-spending czar, along with his support for Germany's far-right extremist AfD party has led to a slump in sales globally - sending shares in the company down by 25% since the start of the year.
"Investors were quick to recognise that this could threaten the more relaxed regulatory approach towards the company which had been in the pipeline as Tesla looks to expand its robotic and self-driving technologies," said Interactive Investor head of markets Richard Hunter.
"Perhaps more importantly, the latest feud has also heightened unease that the president's seemingly irascible and erratic behaviour is symptomatic of the environment which has been created on a global scale. Companies have already been stepping back from providing guidance comments for the next few months, while consumer sentiment is brittle given the wider context of what could be a weakening outlook."
Back on planet earth, investors will be watching the US non-farm payrolls report later on the day.
"The release will garner particular attention given that it could awaken the Federal Reserve from its current holding pattern should the number be much weaker than expected," Hunter said.
Meanwhile, the eurozone economy expanded at a much stronger rate than initially expected in the first quarter, registering the steepest rate of growth in two and a half years.
Gross domestic product of the single-currency region was estimated to have grown by 0.6% over the first three months of 2025.
That's double the rate of growth originally estimated last month (+0.3%) and ahead of the 0.4% expected by economists.
In equity news, sportswear and athleisure retailers Adidas and Puma were both lower after US peer Lululemon Athletica cut its annual profit forecast citing tariffs, economic uncertainty and consumer caution as shoppers cut discretionary spending.
Polish banks were lower again after the election of right wing nationalist Karol Nawrocki as president. Bank Polska Kasa Opieki, Powszechna Kasa Oszczednosci Bank, and Santander Polska all fell for the third straight session.
Reporting by frank Prenesti for Sharecast.com
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