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By Joao Manuel Vicente Mauricio and Ankika Biswas

(Reuters) -Technology and automobile shares lifted Europe’s benchmark index to a near one-month high on Wednesday, while investors braced for a crucial no-confidence vote by French lawmakers that will likely oust Prime Minister Michel Barnier’s government.

The pan-European index was up 0.3% at 0930 GMT, on track for its fifth straight session of gains, with 40 rising 0.4%. was up 0.8%, trading above the 20,000-point mark that it crossed for the first time on Tuesday.

French lawmakers will vote on no-confidence motions that, barring a last minute surprise, will oust Barnier’s government at a time when the country is struggling to tame a massive budget deficit.

The debate is due to start at 1500 GMT, with voting expected a few hours later.

“If he is defeated, which looks likely, France will be weighed down by a burdensome budget deficit, while another political vacuum opens,” said Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets, Hargreaves (LON:) Lansdown.

“If difficult decisions are put off, clouding the economic horizon, it won’t help business confidence and may limit investment and recruitment and could lead to further wariness among consumers.”

On Wednesday, data showed that political uncertainty hit France’s services sector, while the euro zone’s business activity fell sharply last month but was slightly ahead of a preliminary estimate.

Among individual stocks, Vestas dropped 5% after the Danish wind turbine maker said CFO Hans Martin Smith would step down by end-2024, fuelling investor concerns.

Signify lost 4% after Barclays (LON:) downgraded the stock of the lighting maker to “underweight” from “overweight”.

Meanwhile, AstraZeneca (NASDAQ:) and Novartis (SIX:) lost around 2% each, dragging down the healthcare index, after HSBC cut the target price of the former and downgraded the latter to “reduce” from “hold”.

Leading the gainers on the STOXX 600, Hexagon jumped 7.3% after the company proposed the former CEO of ABB (ST:) and Sandvik as the new vice chairman.

Hexagon’s gains, along with Dutch computer chip packaging company BE Semiconductor’s 4% rise, aided an over 1% gain in the tech sector.

Norwegian oil tanker group Frontline (NYSE:) climbed 5% after analysts pointing to expanded U.S. sanctions on Iran.

The auto sector was the top sectoral gainer, with Stellantis (NYSE:) rising 1% after a report said that Apple (NASDAQ:)’s outgoing CFO could become the new CEO of the Italian-French carmaker. However, the company later denied these claims.



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