PARIS — November 6, 2025. The French equity benchmark trended lower through the lunch hour on Thursday, weighed by an earnings‑led selloff in electrical‑equipment maker Legrand and fresh turbulence in travel and payments stocks. By 12:09 CET, the CAC 40 was down 0.52% at 8,031.86, having traded between 8,005.88 and 8,043.61 after opening at 8,016.67. Year to date, the index remains +8.63%, with a 2025 high of 8,271.48 and low of 6,763.76. [1]
Market snapshot (midday)
- CAC 40: 8,031.86 (−0.52%) at 12:09 CET; intraday low/high 8,005.88/8,043.61. [2]
- Tone in Europe: Broader European shares were modestly lower as investors digested mixed earnings and awaited the Bank of England decision. [3]
Five things moving French stocks today
1) Legrand sinks on growth miss and tariff hit
Legrand said nine‑month sales rose 11.9% to €6.97bn, a touch below consensus, and flagged $110–130m in 2025 cost headwinds from U.S. tariffs. The stock slumped ~11% and was briefly halted, dragging peers like Schneider Electric. Management highlighted resilient data‑centre demand but no near‑term market improvement. [4]
2) Worldline launches €500m capital injection backed by French banks
Payments group Worldline announced a two‑step €500m equity raise (a €110m reserved sale to Bpifrance, Crédit Agricole, BNP Paribas, followed by a €390m rights issue). Post‑deal, the investors are set to own 9.6%, 9.5% and 7.9% respectively—part of a turnaround that targets positive free cash flow by 2027. [5]
3) Engie: earnings miss, guidance steady at the top end
Engie reported an 18% drop in Q3 earnings versus estimates, blaming weaker hydropower output and lower gas prices. Even so, the group reaffirmed its 2025 outlook at the upper end for non‑nuclear EBIT (€8–9bn) and net recurring income (€4.4–5bn). [6]
4) Veolia confirms trajectory after solid nine‑month delivery
Veolia posted +5.4% year‑on‑year growth in nine‑month EBITDA (constant scope/FX) to €5.08bn, and reiterated full‑year targets, citing efficiency gains and steady demand outside Europe. [7]
5) Air France‑KLM slides on Q3 read‑across
Air France‑KLM shares tumbled ~12% after results that were broadly in line on some metrics but disappointed on operating profit versus analyst expectations; commentary also pointed to unit‑revenue and cost pressures. [8]
Context: why Paris lagged today
- Earnings skittishness: A string of mixed updates across Europe kept risk appetite subdued; the STOXX 600 hovered slightly lower as investors reassessed tech‑adjacent valuations and awaited central‑bank cues. [9]
- Rates watch: With UK policy in focus later today, traders stayed cautious across continental indices—a factor that often narrows liquidity and amplifies stock‑specific moves. [10]
Sector heat check (intraday themes)
- Electrical equipment / industrial tech:Legrand’s drop set the tone, with knock‑on weakness in Schneider Electric as investors questioned growth/valuation in AI‑adjacent electrification names. [11]
- Utilities: A split screen—Engie under pressure after the miss but leaning on guidance, while Veolia’s steady delivery underpins defensive interest in waste/water services. [12]
- Airlines/travel:Air France‑KLM fell double digits on earnings quality and cost commentary, overshadowing robust summer seasonality. [13]
- Payments/Fintech:Worldline’s recap plan dominated headlines; bank backers signalled strategic support but near‑term dilution remains a talking point. [14]
By the numbers (as of 12:09 CET)
- Index level: 8,031.86 (−0.52%)
- Day’s range:8,005.88–8,043.61
- Open / Prev. close:8,016.67 / 8,074.23
- 2025 YTD:+8.63%
- 2025 high / low:8,271.48 / 6,763.76. [15]
What to watch next
- BoE policy decision and press conference—potential spillover to euro‑area rate expectations and FX that can ripple through exporters and luxury names in Paris. [16]
- U.S. macro tone into the afternoon, after a week of hawkish Fed chatter and shifting rate‑cut odds that have kept global risk assets choppy. [17]
Quick take
The CAC 40’s decline today is earnings‑led rather than a broad macro shock. Still, the combo of pricey tech‑adjacent names, mixed Q3 scorecards, and a central‑bank event later in the day argues for a choppy close. If headline risk stays contained, dip‑buyers will likely focus on defensives with confirmed guidance (e.g., Veolia) and banks tied to Worldline’s process only after the recap terms crystallize; on the flip side, Legrand’s tariff‑related cost overhang may keep a lid on that corner of industrial tech in the near term. [18]
References
1. www.finanzen.ch, 2. www.finanzen.ch, 3. www.reuters.com, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.marketscreener.com, 8. www.investing.com, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.reuters.com, 13. www.investing.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. www.finanzen.ch, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.marketscreener.com


