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After Russia-Ukraine meeting, defence stocks rise in the STOXX 600 index of Europe

After Russia-Ukraine meeting, defence stocks rise in the STOXX 600 index of Europe

European shares recovered from an early drop to close higher Thursday. Industrial stocks got the biggest boost while corporate earnings were in the spotlight.

The STOXX 600 index for the continent was up by 0.6%. The majority of major regional indexes rose, with Germany up 0.7%.

Russian President Vladimir Putin snubbed

challenge

To meet face-toface with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Turkey is to deal a serious blow to the prospects of a breakthrough for peace.

Hensoldt, Rheinmetall and Leonardo all saw gains of 4% or more. The European aerospace and defence index rose 2.3%.

Chris Beauchamp is the chief market analyst for IG.

In the meantime, data from the U.S. revealed a

surprise fall

A slowdown in the growth of producer prices and in

Retail sales

growth.

Beauchamp stated that there was a reasonable amount of anxiety to monitor the economy and check for signs of inflation.

"The data were benign... that's the most important thing" (in this uncertain climate).

After their quarterly reports, France's Engie and London's National Grid and United Utilities rose, and lifted utilities by 1.9%.

The biggest gains were in the telecommunications sector, boosted by a 2.8% rise in Deutsche Telekom following its first-quarter results.

Profit from the newest technology

A little bit above expectations

The benchmark STOXX600 index was higher in most sectors, but a drop in commodity prices hurt companies with a resource focus.

Oil prices fell more than 3% in anticipation of a possible nuclear agreement between the United States and Iran that could increase supply.

The major oil companies were the worst hit, with BP shares and Shell's Amsterdam-listed shares dropping by 3.3% and 1.55% respectively. Energy shares fell 0.9%, underperforming peers.

The prices of industrial metals have also fallen, resulting in heavy losses for basic resources.

The mood was positive in the markets this week as they welcomed the U.S. China trade truce, and U.S. president Donald Trump's Middle East investment deals. Trump is yet to announce any deals with the European Union.

A flash estimate shows that the gross domestic product grew slightly less than expected on an annual basis. However, Britain's economy did better than expected in March compared to February.

Among the single stocks, thyssenkrupp fell 12.5%, to the bottom of STOXX 600 after the group that makes everything from submarines to car parts posted a drop in its operating profit for the second quarter.

Analysts attribute the 1% drop in Siemens shares to a weaker than expected free cash flow despite Siemens' beating expectations for its second-quarter results. Reporting by Nikhil Sharma, Purvi Agarwal and Varun H K; Editing by Sherry J. Phillips, Varun HK and Ed Osmond

(source: Reuters)