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STOXX 600, Germany's DAX, EZ blue-chip index confirm
correction
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German industrial orders stagnate, hinting at slow
recovery
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STOXX 600 notches worst week since 2020
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Bank of Italy cuts growth outlook
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Gerresheimer drops after KKR exits takeover talks
By Sukriti Gupta, Medha Singh, Lisa Pauline Mattackal
April 4 (Reuters) - European shares slumped on Friday,
with the benchmark STOXX 600 and Germany's DAX confirming
correction territory, as China's retaliation to sweeping U.S.
tariffs intensified fears of a global recession triggered by the
trade war.
China announced a slew of countermeasures against tariffs
imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump, including additional
tariffs of 34% on all U.S. goods and curbs on export of some
rare earths after the U.S. slapped reciprocal levies on trading
partners on Wednesday.
The pan-European STOXX index closed 5.1% lower, its
biggest daily loss since the COVID-19-fuelled selloff in 2020.
The index fell nearly 12% from its March 3 all-time closing
high, confirming it was in correction territory.
The index's weekly loss of more than 8% was also its worst in
five years as investors shunned risk and sought safe-haven
assets. Euro zone government bond yields dropped sharply.
Germany's DAX and the euro zone blue-chip index
also confirmed they were in a correction, dropping
5% and 4.6%, respectively.
A gauge of euro zone stock market volatility rose
8.68 points to 34.2, its biggest one-day spike in over two
years.
"There's only been a handful of times when risk aversion has
gotten worse than it currently is," said Benjamin Ford,
strategist at Macro Hive. "One was during the great financial
crisis, the other was during COVID-19."
The tit-for-tat tariffs between the world's largest economies
mark a sharp escalation in the global trade war that threatens
to raise prices, upend supply chains and squeeze corporate
profit margins.
The response from other nations is now in focus. France's
industry minister called for a proportionate but firm response,
and said Europe remained open to negotiating a solution.
"Europe might move a package to support their wider economy
... Long-term, it really is going to come down to who retaliates
(against the U.S.) and who just looks to support their economy,"
Ford said.
Traders have ramped up bets on interest rate cuts from the
European Central Bank to shore up economic growth. Traders now
see a chance of nearly 90% of the ECB making a quarter-point
rate cut later this month, along with two more reductions widely
expected by year-end.
Among regional markets, stocks in Spain declined
5.8%, France fell 4.3% and Italy lost 6.5%.
The Bank of Italy cut its 2025 economic growth forecast for the
country to 0.5% from 0.7%.
All major European sectors were in the red, with European banks
leading declines with an 8.4% loss and closing their
worst week in three years.
The luxury sector, which heavily relies on China, also
faltered as France's LVMH lost 2.4%, while Gucci owner
Kering dropped 3.8%.
Data on Friday showed German industrial orders stagnated in
February and the January data was upwardly revised.
Among stocks, Gerresheimer slumped 14.5% after a
report said KKR has abandoned a private equity
consortium discussing a takeover of the German speciality
packaging maker.
(Reporting by Medha Singh, Sukriti Gupta and Lisa Pauline
Mattackal in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Samuel Indyke;
Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala, Shounak Dasgupta and Matthew
Lewis)
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