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* Banks lead declines after sharp weekly gains
* London stocks fall as economic growth slows
* Financials biggest drag on STOXX 600
* Siemens falls after cautious outlook on recovery
(Adds comments, updates prices throughout)
By Sagarika Jaisinghani and Shreyashi Sanyal
Nov 12 (Reuters) - European shares retreated from
eight-month highs on Thursday as surging coronavirus infections
raised doubts about a quicker economic rebound and overshadowed
several upbeat quarterly earnings reports.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index .STOXX was down 0.8%,
reversing after having gained 12.5% so far this month.
The banking index .SX7P led sectoral declines following
its best three-day winning streak since the global financial
crisis in 2009, while travel stocks .SXTP fell 0.6% after
surging earlier in the week on hopes for an effective COVID-19
vaccine.
Financial stocks were the single biggest drag on the STOXX
600.
"This is a calibration of, not capitulation from, the
'vaccine trades' theme that is getting warmed up," analysts at
Mizuho Bank said.
"Markets are re-assessing given (the mass availability of a
vaccine) may take months, while second/third wave resurgence in
Europe and the United States is hitting hospitalisations and
invoking the re-imposition of restrictions."
France on Wednesday overtook Russia as the worst affected
country in Europe, while Italy surpassed the 1-million-
infections mark to become one of the top 10 worst-affected
countries globally. The benchmark STOXX 600 index has gained more than 40% since
a coronavirus-driven crash in March, but it has lagged the U.S.
benchmark S&P 500 on fears of a longer road back to pre-pandemic
levels of economic activity.
Data on Thursday showed Britain's economy grew by a
slower-than-expected 1.1% in September from August even before
the latest restrictions on businesses. London's FTSE 100 .FTSE
fell 0.7% after posting eight straight days of gains. .L
"Those figures provided another embarrassment for the
government – plagued with infighting just as the latest, and
potentially final, Brexit talks reach their crescendo – placing
the UK at the bottom of the GDP table when it comes to major
European economies," said Connor Campbell, financial analyst at
spread better Spreadex.
In company news, Siemens SIEGn.DE shed 3.3% after the
German engineering group gave a cautious outlook on its recovery
from the COVID-19 pandemic, saying it expects government and
company investments next year to lag the global rebound in
economic growth. Zurich Insurance Group ZURN.S rose 0.7% as it said its new
life insurance business picked up in the third quarter, while
Italy's top insurer Generali GASI.MI lost 0.5% after saying it
would not pay the second tranche of the dividend on 2019 results
this year.