European stocks sink on Flynn guilty plea after choppy session
By Helen Reid and Julien Ponthus
LONDON (Reuters) - European stocks, which were recovering from early losses and set to finish the first trading day of December in positive territory, fell suddenly after ex-U.S. national security adviser Michael Flynn pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI.
U.S. stocks and the dollar fell as ABC News reported that Flynn was prepared to testify that President Donald Trump directed him to make contact with the Russians.
The news triggered a rise in the euro and in the pound, which hurt stocks as investors questioned the ability of the U.S. president to implement his tax cuts or simply to survive the political storm.
"The old chatter from the summer about President Trump being impeached has surfaced again", David Madden, an analyst at CMC Markets commented.
Britain's FTSE <.FTSE> slid 0.36 percent and Euro zone stocks <.STOXXE> fell 1.06 percent.
Booming data showing euro zone factories had their busiest month for more than 17 years failed to lift euro zone stocks in morning trading.
Oil and gas was among the only sectors to post a positive performance, thanks to rising oil prices after OPEC and other major producers agreed to continue reining in output. BP (NYSE: BP) rose 0.6 percent and Royal Dutch Shell
The Travel and Leisure index <.SXTP> also rose 0.31 percent after Deutsche Bank took a positive view of transport stocks and upgraded Lufthansa
Dialog, hammered on Thursday by a press report Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) would in-source its power chip design, removing a crucial supplier relationship for the German firm, recovered on Friday to trade up 2.4 percent.
Some healthcare stocks also outperformed. A Morgan Stanley upgrade boosted UCB
British pharma company Indivior
French telecom company Altice
The high-flying tech sector <.SX8P> fell 1.58 percent in a sign of investors' anxiety about parts of the market that have seen stellar performance and inflows this year.
Financials also weighed with Santander losing 2.5 percent, Barclays
The automakers index was down 1.9 percent. Among factors explaining the gloom in the sector, Citi decided to downgrade Peugeot's
(Reporting by Helen Reid; Editing by Georgina Prodhan/Mark Heinrich)
