(Bloomberg) -- European stocks fell for a fifth day,
led by financial-services companies after IKB Deutsche
Industriebank AG of Germany said profit will be ``significantly''
lower than forecast, hit by the U.S. subprime mortgage rout.
IKB tumbled 20 percent. UBS AG, the biggest money manager,
and 3i Group Plc, Europe's largest publicly traded buyout and
venture-capital firm, led declines by financial companies.
Commerzbank AG slid after saying it expects to make provisions
for losses tied to the U.S. subprime mortgage market.
Read more at Bloomberg Stocks News
led by financial-services companies after IKB Deutsche
Industriebank AG of Germany said profit will be ``significantly''
lower than forecast, hit by the U.S. subprime mortgage rout.
IKB tumbled 20 percent. UBS AG, the biggest money manager,
and 3i Group Plc, Europe's largest publicly traded buyout and
venture-capital firm, led declines by financial companies.
Commerzbank AG slid after saying it expects to make provisions
for losses tied to the U.S. subprime mortgage market.
Read more at Bloomberg Stocks News
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