Europe Markets: European stocks vie for ninth straight gain, even with FTSE 100 in a rut

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European stocks were battling for a ninth consecutive advance on Tuesday, led by an advance in retailers.

The Stoxx Europe 600
SXXP,
+0.21%

rose 0.1% to 484.27. It’s the second-longest winning streak of the year, as the index rose for 10 straight trading days through Aug. 13.

What’s notable about the current streak is the U.K. FTSE 100
UKX,
+0.04%

is in a rut, having dropped six of the last nine sessions and easing 0.1% on Tuesday.

Associated British Foods
ABF,
+6.91%

jumped 6% as the owner of the Primark clothing retailer announced a special dividend alongside a 1% rise in full-year revenue. “Having your shops forcibly closed for a third of the year and losing only 5% of sales is no mean feat, especially without an online business to fall back on,” said Nicholas Hyett, an analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.

Gucci owner Kering
KER,
+3.37%

and used-car retailer Auto1
AG1,
+2.50%

each rose 3%.

Salmon farmer Bakkafrost
BAKKA,
-13.20%

dropped 13% after reporting a worse-than-forecast 31% drop in operating profit for the third quarter, in what the company blamed on the higher costs and lower weights and prices from a decision to advance its harvest plan.

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