
The pan-European STOXX 600 index ended 0.7% lower and was down 1.4% for the week, its worst week since December 16.
A report showed the core U.S. Personal Consumption Expenditures index, the Federal Reserveโs preferred gauge for prices, rose at a slightly faster monthly rate of 0.4%.
โWeโre seeing some risk-off sentiment in the market. Today itโs been exacerbated by that stronger core PCE data, which weighed mostly on U.S. stocks, but also translated into European stocks as well,โ Daniela Hathorn, senior market analyst at Capital.com, said.
Europeโs benchmark index retreated to two-week lows on Thursday after Trump announced 25% import tariffs on all imports of vehicles and foreign-made auto parts earlier, raising jitters ahead of an April 2 deadline on reciprocal tariffs on U.S. trading partners.
โMarkets donโt expect tariffs to be as bad and widespread as originally thought. It is still going to affect growth in the near future,โ Hathorn added. Still, the STOXX 600 index is set for its strongest quarterly performance in two years on Germanyโs spending plans and a rotation out of U.S. stocks. Data showed Germanyโs unemployment rose in March at the fastest rate since October 2024, as an economic malaise puts pressure on the job market even against a backdrop of long-term labour shortages.
The countryโs benchmark index dropped 1%.
Inflation in March came in far below forecasts in two of the euro zoneโs largest economies, Spain and France, bolstering bets for another European Central Bank rate cut in April.
Short-dated yields came under pressure. German 2-year yield , more sensitive to the ECB policy rates, dropped 4 basis points to 2.027%, its lowest level since March 4.
The real estate stock which particularly benefits from lower interest rates, jumped 1.5% on the day. Utilities , often traded as a bond proxy, surged 1.6%.
In other company news, Deutsche Bank fell 2.9% as the bank extended CEO Christian Sewingโs contract, while its deputy and another top executive will depart as part of a management revamp, cementing the leadership team of Germanyโs largest lender for the next phase of its turnaround.
Ubisoftโs shares reversed gains to end 1.8% lower on Friday after rising as much as 12% earlier on plans to set up a subsidiary to house three of its popular video game franchises.

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