European stocks stabilise after seven-day selloff
European stocks edged higher on Friday, as investors snapped up battered luxury and technology shares after a plethora of concerns including the prospect of elevated U.S. interest rates and slowing European economy roiled sentiment this week. The pan-European STOXX 600 index rose 0.3% after marking a seven-day losing run on Thursday, its longest such streak since February 2018.
European stocks edged higher on Friday, as investors snapped up battered luxury and technology shares after a plethora of concerns including the prospect of elevated U.S. interest rates and slowing European economy roiled sentiment this week.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index rose 0.3% after marking a seven-day losing run on Thursday, its longest such streak since February 2018. French luxury giant LVMH added 0.7% after slumping earlier this week on concerns about sputtering economic growth in China.
STMicroelectronics inched up 0.3% after getting swept up in a chip selloff on worries about China imposing curbs on Apple's iPhones. While the mood marginally stabilised on Friday, the STOXX 600 was still set for a weekly loss of about 0.7% as investors were concerned about the prospect of a European recession and U.S. rates staying elevated.
Saipem rose 1.9% after the Italian energy services group won new offshore contracts worth 850 million euros ($910.18 million). ($1 = 0.9339 euros)
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
- READ MORE ON:
- European
- iPhones
- LVMH
- China
- French
- Italian
- Apple
- STMicroelectronics
- U.S.
- pan-European