The
pan-European STOXX 600 index pared early losses to dip 0.12
percent while Frankfurt's DAX, Milan's, Madrid's and Paris's
briefly turned positive after data showed German business morale
improved unexpectedly in March, suggesting the country's economy
is likely to pick up in the coming months. London's FTSE was
marginally lower.
European stocks on Friday witnessed their biggest weekly decline
this year following weak manufacturing data from Europe and the
United States that inverted a part of the U.S. yield curve. In
the past, that has signaled an upcoming recession.
"It's the uncertainty around the outlook of the manufacturing
sector which is causing the selloff which should be put into
context of still a very healthy service sector," said Mike Bell,
global market strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management.
"There seem to be conflicting signals from the data with one
survey telling things that things are deteriorating a bit in the
manufacturing side but on the other hand the IFO survey is
showing a pick up."
Among the biggest weights on the pan-region index was Germany's
Bayer, down 2.1 percent. Its chief executive said over the
weekend that management retained the backing of its supervisory
board despite a second U.S. ruling that its glyphosate-based
Roundup weed killer caused cancer.
While losses in health and technology sectors weighed on the
index, a rise in auto stocks and banks limited losses.
Fiat Chrysler jumped 3.2 percent. The Wall Street Journal
reported that the Italian carmaker had rebuffed merger
approaches by Peugeot earlier this year.
British satellite operator Inmarsat jumped 8.6 percent to lead
gains on STOXX after a private equity-led consortium agreed to
buy the company for about $3.4 billion in cash.
Majestic Wine tanked 11.2 percent, on course for its worst day
since November after it said it would review its dividend policy
as it looks to focus on its online wine retail business Naked
Wines.
Investors are also dealing with the uncertainty surrounding the
United Kingdom's exit from the European Union, with the risk of
a potentially major "no-deal" shock to the European economy just
over two weeks away.
Prime Minister Theresa May is under pressure to give a date for
leaving office to swing Brexit-supporting rebel lawmakers in her
party behind her twice-defeated European Union divorce treaty.
(Reporting by Medha Singh and Agamoni Ghosh in Bengaluru,;
Editing by Keith Weir and Ed Osmond)
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