(Alliance News) - Piazza Affari is expected to open higher in Monday's trading session on a day poor in macro data but still packed with corporate results, with small caps and PMIs leading the way.

The FTSE Mib is given up 125.0 points or 0.4 percent after closing Friday down 0.5 percent at 28,504.43.

London's FTSE 100 is given up 23.3 points or 0.3 percent, Paris' CAC 40 is indicated up 30.0 points and Frankfurt's DAX 40 is expected up 49.2 points or 0.3 percent.

In Milan on Friday evening, the Mid-Cap lost 0.8 percent to 40,680.77, the Small-Cap fell 0.8 percent to 25,346.72, and Italy Growth gave up 0.7 percent to 7,609.68.

On the main list in Piazza Affari, CNH Industrial continued in contraction as seen since the bell rang, giving up 3.3 percent on Friday evening and continuing the bearish streak.

Campari also confirmed the bearish trend, contracting 3.8 percent after a slight rise on the eve of the day.

Pirelli - down 1.4 percent - reported Thursday that its board of directors reviewed its consolidated results as of Sept. 30, reporting a net profit of EUR168.4 million in the last quarter, 33 percent higher from EUR126.3 million in the third quarter of 2022.

Leonardo - up 4.7 percent, leading the list and among the few bullish performers of the day - reported Thursday that it ended the first nine months with orders of EUR13.28 billion, up 15 percent from EUR11.72 billion in the same period a year earlier.

Revenues increased to EUR10.27 billion from EUR9.92 billion a year earlier, thanks in part to a significant recovery in Aerostructures, up 32 percent from the first nine months of 2022, and the performance of Defense and Security Electronics. Revenues for the period rose to EUR1.72 billion from EUR1.84 billion million with organic growth of 2.2 percent excluding the exchange rate effect, which weighed 8.4 percent.

Unipol's board of directors -- up 0.3 percent -- approved consolidated results as of Sept. 30, closing with a profit with a consolidated net income of EUR769 million, compared with consolidated net income of EUR854 million in the corresponding period last year. It should be noted that last year, as the company specifies, "reflected extraordinary items of approximately EUR275 million related to the pro-rata consolidation of BPER Banca. The figure for the first nine months 2022, restated for comparative purposes in application of the new principles, would be EUR495 million."

On the Mid-Cap, good session for illimity Bank, which rose 1.1 percent after publishing good nine-month accounts. The bank reported net income of EUR75.0 million from EUR50.6 million, up 58 percent from the same period a year earlier. As of Sept. 30, net interest income stood at EUR147.7 million, up 27 percent to EUR116.1 million in 2022.

It did better than GVS, which gained 4.1 percent, on the heels of the eve's 5.6 percent rise.

Webuild's board of directors--up 1.1 percent--reported Thursday that it recorded a record EUR22 billion in new orders in the first nine months of the year. Of these, more than EUR12.6 billion of the new orders came from abroad-Australia, the U.S. and the Middle East-while orders from Italy totaled EUR9.4 billion.

Antares, on the other hand, gave up 5.9 percent to EUR2.9550 per share, after two sessions closed higher, in which it accumulated a gain of 9 percent.

Ascopiave also hurt, down 3.0%. The board of directors approved the interim report as of September 30, closing with a consolidated net profit, amounting to EUR14.4 million, and showing a decrease compared to the same period last year, when it was EUR25.3 million. The Ascopiave Group closed the first nine months with consolidated revenues of EUR125.2 million, compared to EUR120.0 million recorded in the first nine months of 2022.

On the Small-Cap, Datalogic--down 12 percent--reported Thursday that it closed the first nine months with revenues down to EUR417.0 million from EUR476.5 million in the same period a year earlier, with declines recorded in all geographic areas in which it operates.

Aquafil closed up 1.1 percent after declining accounts released in the eve. It made a loss in the first nine months with a net loss of EUR17.1 million, which compares with a profit of EUR26.1 million in the same period a year earlier.

Digital Bros -- down 1.7 percent -- announced Thursday that it closed the first quarter of fiscal 2023-2024 with a net loss of EUR3.1 million compared to a net profit of EUR3.1 million as of Sept. 30, 2022. Revenues for the first quarter amounted to EUR20.2 million, down 9.7 percent from EUR22.4 million in the same period of 2022.

On a positive note, SoftLab rose 4.6 percent to EUR1.4850, after eve's decline of 5.9 percent.

Among SMEs, Convergenze gave up 9.3 percent, hitting a 52-week low of EUR1.37.

Svas Biosana--down 0.9 percent--reported Thursday that its revenues rose to EUR81.6 million from EUR69.5 million in the same period a year earlier.

Among the bullish, expert.ai rose 2.5 percent after an equal drop in the eve.

In Asia, the Nikkei closed Monday up 0.1 percent to 32,585.11, the Shanghai Composite rose 0.3 percent to 3,046.53 and the Hang Seng was up 0.5 percent to 17,280.63.

In New York on Friday evening, the Dow rose 1.1 percent to 34,283.10, the Nasdaq gained 2.1 percent to 13,798.11 and the S&P 500 closed up 1.6 percent to 4,415.24.

Among currencies, the euro changed hands at USD1.0693 against USD1.0667 recorded in closing European equities Friday while the pound was worth USD1.2241 from USD1.2193 on Friday evening.

Among commodities, Brent crude is worth USD80.91 per barrel from USD81.11 per barrel at Friday's close. Gold, on the other hand, trades at USD1,940.03 an ounce from USD1,944.50 an ounce Friday evening.

Monday's macroeconomic calendar features the German current account, at 1500 CET, five minutes after French three-, six-, and 12-month BTF auctions are held.

From the US, room for crude oil stocks data, at 1630 CET, and auctions of three- and six-month Treasury bonds.

Among the companies that will release data on Monday are Banca Generali, ERG, EuroGroup Laminations, and Unieuro, among others.

By Giuseppe Fabio Ciccomascolo, Alliance News senior reporter

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