LONDON: European shares traded in negative territory on Tuesday morning as investors started to question whether the truce agreed by the United States and China on their trade dispute would lead to a long-term deal.
After enjoying a rally for its first day of trading in December, Germany's DAX - the most sensitive to China and trade war fears - was down 0.6 percent at 0906 GMT.
The pan-European STOXX 600 fell 0.3 percent.
"The number one driver for global risk sentiment is the US-China trade talks, which suddenly don't look as promising as they did over the weekend," wrote Commerzbank rates strategist Christoph Rieger.
The European automotive sector, which is most sensitive to trade war fears, was the worst performing one, down 1.7 percent.
The tech sector was also a big loser, down 0.9 percent.
Chipmakers, which are also heavily exposed to China and trade sustained heavy losses with AMS down 4.7 percent, Siltronic down 3.8 percent.
Adding to the weak sentiment, the yield curve between US three-year and five-year notes and between two-year and five-year inverted on Monday, a first since the financial crisis, excluding very short-dated debt.
Analysts now fear an inversion of the two-year, 10-year yield curve could be imminent and point towards a possible US recession.
"Recessionary fear is starting to raise its ugly head," wrote Stephen Innes at broker Oanda.
France's JCDecaux posted one of the worst individual falls, down about 6 percent after Exane BNP Paribas reinitiated its coverage of the stock with an "underperform" rating.
French catering group Elior sank 7.3 percent after cutting its sales growth outlook, and Belgian postal services firm Bpost plunged 20 percent after a profit warning.
Energy stocks were among the few gainers as oil prices rose amid expected OPEC-led supply cuts and a mandated reduction in Canadian output.
BP rose 0.6 percent and Royal Dutch Shell 0.5 percent.
German industrial gases group Linde will replace British bank Barclays on the leading index of pan-European stocks STOXX Europe 50 STOXX Ltd, the operator of Deutsche Boerse Group's index business, said.
The change comes as part of the quarterly reshuffle and will be effective at the opening of European trading on Dec. 24, STOXX said on Monday.
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