Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters and anchored today by Josephine Mason. Reach her on Messenger to share your thoughts on market moves: josephine.mason.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net
MIXED PICTURE IN EUROPE (0650 GMT)
European stocks are expected to end the month and quarter on a slightly weak note amid renewed concerns about the U.S.-China trade spat after a report that Washington is considering delisting Chinese companies from U.S. stock exchanges. Stock futures are pretty mixed, with Paris futures down 0.1% and Madrid up 0.2%.
A rise in German retail sales in August has helped ease some worries that a slower pace of manufacturing would hurt consumer spending in Europe's top economy.
In corporate news, Kloeckner KCOGn.DE shares are down more than 4% in pre-market trade after a local newspaper report that talks over a potential steel tie-up with ThyssenKrupp TKAG.DE collapsed.
In other dealmaking, Anglo-Australian miner Rio Tinto RIO.L , RIO.AX has cancelled plans for the sale or floatation of its Canadian iron ore business, following unsuccessful attempts to find buyers, according to a Wall Street Journal report.
KPN KPN.AS shares are seen down 5% after Dominique Leroy, the Belgian telecommunications executive who was slated to move the Dutch company, has been dropped as candidate to take the top job due to an investigation into a share sale. Leroy is under investigation for her sale of shares in Proximus PROX.BR , the company she was leaving.
Shell RDSa.L is seen under pressure after it says it sees negative impact from foreign exchange in Q3 and a net charge of $700 million to $850 million in Q3, while BP BP.L may fall after a report CEO Bob Dudley is preparing to step down from the oil major.
Here are some early headlines:
Novartis says Kisqali boosts survival in breast cancer patients investigates wife of Eni's CEO in Congo graft probe of GSK and AstraZeneca trials may widen ovarian cancer drug use buys German fibre optic firm Inexio; source values deal around $1.1 bln extends Spark offer again as regulatory review drags on cuts rights issue to 2.8 bln Sfr in push to buy Liberty Global's UPC Tinto scraps plans for Canadian iron ore unit sale, floatation - WSJ blames XL Airways collapse on Oslo aid, appeals to EU Atlantia picks KPMG, Ramboll and SGS to conduct audit on units involved in probe P&G say they will miss 2020 deforestation goals And Indivumed Reach Milestone In Joint Drug Discovery Collaboration drops Leroy as CEO candidate amid investigation into share sale Mason)
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EUROPE ENDING Q3 ON LACKLUSTRE NOTE (0528 GMT)
European stocks are expected to end the month and quarter largely on a slightly lacklustre note amid fresh worries about tensions between China and the United States.
IG financial spreadbetters expect London's FTSE to open 4 points lower at 7,423, Frankfurt's DAX to open 10 points lower at 12,371, and Paris' CAC to open 7 points lower at 5,633.
Chinese markets, which will shut for the rest of the week for national holidays, were slightly lower overnight after a report on Friday that the U.S. may limit Chinese company listings on its stock exchanges fueled the U.S.-China trade worries ahead of the critical October negotiations.
Dust appears to have settled in the United States though, with Wall Street futures indicating a higher open later.
Closer to home, transatlantic trade ties face renewed disruption this week when global arbiters are expected to grant the United States a record award allowing it to hit European imports with billions of dollars of tariffs in a long-running aircraft subsidy dispute. pan European index .STOXX and euro-zone benchmark closed last week at a one-week high, but notched up their first weekly drop in six as macroeconmic data renewed concerns about the health of the euro-zone economy and the U.S. impeachment probe of President Trump rattled investors.
They are on track for a more than 3% rise this month and their third straight quarterly gain, although the pace of growth has slowed substantially from the double-digit percentage gains in Q1.
(Josephine Mason)
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