European shares settle higher with focus on earnings, monetary policy
The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, January 20, 2026. REUTERS/staff
By Avinash P, Niket Nishant and Johann M Cherian
Jan 26 (Reuters) - European shares ended higher on Monday, underpinned by gains in financials in the run-up to earnings from big banks later this week.
The pan-European STOXX 600 traded choppily for most of the session and closed up 0.2% at 609.83 points - its highest in over a week. Banks led gains among sectors with a 1% gain each.
Earnings from several major lenders such as Germany's Deutsche Bank
The tech sector will also be scrutinised for signs of AI monetisation when sector heavyweights in the U.S. such as Microsoft and Apple report results later in the week.
"Risk assets tend to make headway early in a new year, but that can experience a reassessment once the data and the corporate earnings start to come through. That's probably the key vulnerability right now," said Jeremy Batstone-Carr, European strategist at Raymond James.
Traders were still recovering from last week's bout of U.S.-EU trade uncertainty sparked by a dispute over Greenland, while also weighing the long-term implications of U.S. tariffs being used as a bargaining chip in an unrelated matter.
Prices of safe-haven gold and silver soared, sending mining stocks up 1.6% to the index's highest since June 2008.
Among Monday's earnings, Ryanair lost 2.3% after reporting third-quarter results. French food and beverage maker Danone slipped 2.3%, having touched its lowest in a year on recalling specific baby formula batches in certain markets.
Airbus slipped 2.1%. In an internal letter seen by Reuters, CEO Guillaume Faury warned staff that the planemaker must be ready to adapt to unsettling new geopolitical risks.
Also limiting gains was a 1.6% drop in defence shares <.SXPARO>.
On the other hand, sportswear maker Puma shot up 16.9%, recovering from Friday's 14% slide.
On policy, the spotlight will be on the Federal Reserve's interest rate decision later this week. The Fed is expected to leave borrowing costs unchanged, but concerns about its independence are likely to be centre stage.
Globally, speculation was rife about potential Japanese central bank intervention in currency markets, which lifted the yen to a two-month high against the dollar. This sentiment also weighed on the euro, which lost 0.7% to hit its lowest level against the yen in more than one month.
(Reporting by Niket Nishant, Avinash P and Johann M Cherian in Bengaluru; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala and Arun Koyyur)
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