MILAN/FRANKFURT: European shares broke a four-day winning run on Thursday, with banks reeling from the prospect of near-zero interest rates for a prolonged period, while a technology stock sell-off continued on Wall Street, piling pressure on European tech shares.
The pan-European STOXX 600 finished 0.5% lower, easing from a one-month closing high hit in the previous session, while the German DAX slipped 0.4% and France's CAC 40 dropped 0.7%.
UK's FTSE 100, dominated by global companies that bring offshore revenue home, took comfort as the pound slumped after the Bank of England said it was looking more closely at how it might cut interest rates below zero.
The blue-chip index, however, closed 0.5% lower, with major banks like HSBC, Barclays and Standard Chartered falling about 2%.
The broader European banking index - the worst performing sector with a 38% decline this year - dropped 1.6%.
Property group Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield slumped 10% to the bottom of the STOXX 600 after announcing plans to raise 3.5 billion euros ($4.1 billion).
Among the bright spots, Delivery Hero rose 2.4% after the food delivery group said it would buy the Latin American operations of Glovo for up to 230 million euros. It also launched operations in Japan.
Britain's Next rose 4.1% after it raised its profit outlook for the second time in two months, becoming the latest retailer to report strong results this week. Despite Thursday's declines, the encouraging updates from fashion retailers, buoyant M&A activity and increasing hopes for a coronavirus vaccine kept the STOXX 600 on course for weekly gains.
Tech stocks continued to weigh on Wall Street, while in Europe, they shed 1.0%.
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