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Europe’s main stock index was set to snap a three-session streak of declines on Wednesday as technology stocks rebounded, while safe-haven bids took a backseat as investors monitored ongoing developments around the Ukraine-Russia conflict.

A day after Russia lowered its threshold for a nuclear strike, Reuters reported Vladimir Putin’s openness to discuss a Ukraine ceasefire deal with US President-elect Donald Trump, provided it rules out major territorial concessions and Kyiv abandons plans to join NATO.

The pan-European STOXX 600 was up 0.5% as of 0920 GMT, after touching a three-month low on Tuesday amid an investor rush to safe-haven assets.

Main bourses in Germany, France, and Spain advanced between 0.4% and 0.9%.

Supporting risky bets, the Swiss franc and US government bond prices dipped, while the dollar touched a one-week low in early trade.

“Despite (Tuesday’s) knee-jerk reaction to Russia-Ukraine concerns, I don’t think any investor is going to just put that off to one side because the world order is shifting somewhat,” said Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis, AJBell.

European stocks sink

Focus is also on the US President-elect’s administration appointments, including the search for a Treasury secretary.

Wall Street CEO Howard Lutnick will lead Trump’s trade and tariff strategy.

“The biggest potential concern (on Trump appointments) is tariffs, because that would have a massive impact on European economy and thereby markets, particularly with the likes of inflation,” Hewson said.

Aiding the technology index’s 1% gain, Sage Group jumped 17% after announcing better-than-expected annual operating profit and the software firm’s launch of a 400-million-pound share buyback.

The tech sector’s performance outlook also hinges on quarterly results from the world’s most valuable company Nvidia, seen as a barometer for the sector’s shift to AI, due after market close.

Meanwhile, the ECB has warned about a “bubble” in AI-related stocks, which could burst abruptly if investors’ rosy expectations are not met. Boosting the construction and materials index, Holcim rose 3% after J.P. Morgan upgraded the building material supplier’s stock to “overweight” from “neutral”.

ArgenX gained 4% after the Belgian biotech company announced progress in the development of its flagship drug Vyvgart.

La Française des Jeux fell 5.5% after Credit Agricole Assurances unveiled plans to sell 2.2% of the French gaming group’s share capital.

British Land slipped 3% after the commercial property firm posted a marginal half-year profit rise.

Elsewhere, UK stocks underperformed regional peers with a 0.3% gain after domestic inflation came in above the central bank’s 2% target last month, underscoring the BOE’s caution on rate cuts.

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