UPDATE 1-European shares slip as trade uncertainty, AI-disruption fears weigh

The pan-European STOXX 600 index was down 0.1% at 627.15 points by 0915 GMT. A resurgence in trade uncertainty dominated global markets as U.S. President Donald Trump's new blanket tariff rate took effect, according to a Customs notice, after his earlier tariffs were deemed unconstitutional.


Reuters | Updated: 24-02-2026 15:14 IST | Created: 24-02-2026 15:14 IST
UPDATE 1-European shares slip as trade uncertainty, AI-disruption fears weigh

European shares slipped on Tuesday as investors avoided large bets against an uncertain trade backdrop, while banks tanked, tracking a Wall Street selloff after artificial intelligence-disruption concerns ‌resurfaced. The pan-European STOXX 600 index was down 0.1% at 627.15 points by 0915 GMT.

A resurgence in trade uncertainty dominated global markets as U.S. President Donald Trump's new blanket tariff rate took effect, according to a Customs notice, after his earlier tariffs were deemed unconstitutional. The development fuelled ambiguities about ‌trade deals struck last year following which the European Parliament decided to postpone for a second time a vote on the ‌trade agreement signed with the U.S.

"The EU concern is that a stacking nature of the 15% Section 122 tariffs would bring total tariff rates for some products above the 15% maximum agreed by the EU and the U.S.," strategists led by Deutsche Bank's Jim Reid said in a note. "Net-net we still think the effective tariff ⁠rate will ​fall this year and that the world ⁠post-SCOTUS will see lower tariffs than the pre-SCOTUS world."

Meanwhile, banks tumbled more than 1.6% each, leading sectors lower as they tracked a Wall Street selloff from Monday, with renewed ⁠concerns that newer AI models could disrupt traditional businesses. Analysts also pointed to a bearish analysis from Citrini Research on the possible risks to the global ​economy and the broader financial sector.

Investors instead flocked to havens such as utilities , which gained 1.6%, while a few better-than-expected corporate ⁠reports also provided some relief. Earnings expectations for the fourth-quarter have improved to a 0.6% drop from around 4% earlier this month. However, the outlook is likely to be further ⁠clouded ​by recent trade uncertainty.

Forvia climbed 6% after the car parts supplier forecast higher operating margin of between 6% and 6.5% in 2026. The broader auto sector gained 1.6%. French vouchers and benefit cards provider Edenred added 7.7% after reporting 2025 core earnings above market expectations, citing ⁠rising sales and initial benefits from its cost-cutting and efficiency plan.

Spanish telecoms giant Telefonica gained nearly 1% on expectations of core profit growth ⁠between 1.5% and 2.5% in 2026, ⁠as it works to further reduce leverage under its new strategy. Engine maker MTU Aero Engines lost 5.6% after forecasting 2026 results broadly in line with analyst expectations, as it navigates the fallout from partner Pratt & Whitney's ‌warning on defective ‌engine components last year.

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