European stocks fall as rebound ends, volatility jumps
The German share price index, DAX board, is seen at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, February 6, 2018. REUTERS/Staff/Remote
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By Helen Reid and Julien Ponthus
LONDON (Reuters) - European shares closed in negative territory on Thursday as volatility made a brutal comeback and ended a short-lived rebound after the beginning of the week's global sell-off.
Europe's VSTOXX volatility index <.V2TX> jumped to 32, its highest since the UK's Brexit referendum, and all European bourses ended deep in the red.
Europe's STOXX 600 share index <.STOXX> fell 1.8 percent, France's CAC 40 <.FCHI> was down 2 percent and Germany's DAX <.GDAXI> lost 2.6 percent.
In Frankfurt, growth-sensitive stocks such as Volkswagen
The pan-European index is down more than 4 percent after equities took a battering worldwide this week.
"Technically, the rebound has failed," said Mikael Jaccoby, of broker Oddo, explaining that markets are now clearly in a "risk-off" mode.
Results from ABB
M&A headlines and positive trading updates, notably from banks, failed to maintain Thursday's rally.
Danish telecoms company TDC (NYSE: TDC) led the STOXX 600, shooting up by nearly 18 percent -- its best day since June 2007 -- after it rejected a takeover approach from Macquarie and three Danish pension funds.
Swiss Re's
Financials limited the damage, with strong earnings from UniCredit
SocGen's shares rose by 1.9 percent after the bank reported forecast-beating results despite a quarterly drop in profit.
"French retail revenues better than guidance and good numbers in markets, with equity derivatives back to normal," Jefferies analysts said.
Italy's UniCredit rose 2.1 percent after profit topped forecasts and Banco BPM
France's Pernod Ricard
"The question was does this correction change the earnings picture or the economic picture? At this point, no it doesn't," said Pierre Bose, head of European strategy at Credit Suisse.
After this week's sharp correction, valuations of the STOXX 600 have fallen back below their one-year average.
"It's not cheap, but it's much closer to fair value," Bose said. "The market was moving close to vertically for the first few weeks of this year and absolute valuation has been a bit expensive for the past 18 months.
"From that point of view the correction that we've had is actually extremely helpful."
(Reporting by Helen Reid; Editing by David Goodman)
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