Large-cap companies pulled European stocks higher on Friday as a surge in Britain's Vodafone and strong earnings for media businesses and Nestle spurred recovery from a sell-off driven by the European Central Bank.
The pan-European benchmark index rose 0.3%, bouncing back from its worst session in three weeks. London's FTSE 100 outperformed European peers with a 0.8% advance, helped by telecoms companies.
Vodafone gained 10.6% to record it strongest performance since late 2002 on plans to separate its towers unit in Europe into a new company worth upwards of 18 billion euros ($20 billion) with a view to a potential stock market listing.
The STOXX 600 telecoms index rose 2.3% as shares of Cellnex, currently Europe's biggest towers group, gained 3.3% and Telecom Italia rose 4.1% after Vodafone agreed to jointly roll out 5G in Italy and merge their mobile mast operations.
However, media stocks led the gains after upbeat results from France's Vivendi, satellite operator SES and education company Pearson.
Another blue-chip stock to perform well was Kitkat maker Nestle, which rose nearly 2% after posting its fastest quarterly sales growth in three years.
"There has been a more positive set of corporate earnings since yesterday's close and chiefly Vodafone," said City Index analyst Ken Odeluga.
European shares took a beating on Thursday after ECB chief Mario Draghi all but pledged to ease monetary policy further and even hinted at a reinterpretation of the bank's inflation target but disappointed some investors who had hoped for an immediate cut to interest rates.
Despite Thursday's blip, the main STOXX index posted a 0.8% gain on the week, driven partly by hopes of policy easing from the ECB as economic data points to a worsening outlook for Europe's already slowing economy.
"There is a bit of reassessment and the market has attracted some buyers back due to the big selling yesterday," said Odeluga.
"We also had the US GDP (data), which was not as bad as expected and allows investors to go into the weekend with a bit more positive sentiment."
US data showed economic growth slowed less than expected in the second quarter, though it did little to deter expectations that the US Federal Reserve will cut interest rates by 25 basis points next week.
Among the weak spots, Banco Sabadell and Caixabank fell more than 6.5% after the Spanish lenders reduced their 2019 earnings guidance, hurt by low interest rates.
Politics were also in the spotlight after Spain's parliament rejected Pedro Sanchez's bid to be confirmed as prime minister on Thursday. Sanchez said he will work to avoid a repeat election but is no longer prepared to offer a coalition government to far-left Podemos.
Luxury stock Kering slumped 7% as its main Gucci brand posted a slower than expected rise in second-quarter sales, hit by a blip in the United States.