European shares set for weekly gains as earnings outlook improves; geopolitical tensions in focus

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European shares edged higher on Friday and were on track for weekly gains, buoyed by a broadly improving corporate earnings outlook and easing AI-disruption worries, while simmering geopolitical tensions kept a lid on enthusiasm.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index rose 0.48% to 628.35 points by 0942 GMT, trading just shy of an all-time high, with most regional benchmarks also in the black.

Luxury brand Moncler jumped ​11.3% after ⁠reporting a 7% rise in revenue in the fourth quarter, helped by solid growth in Asia ⁠and the Americas.

The personal and household goods sector added 1.4%, while gains spilled over to the broader luxury sector that rose 2%.

The STOXX index was also set to mark its biggest weekly jump ​since early January as investors were relieved by an overall improving corporate earnings outlook, while concerns that new artificial intelligence models could imminently disrupt traditional businesses temporarily took a back seat.

Anis Lahlou, ​chief investment officer of European equities at Aperture Investors, said the big wake-up call ⁠was discovering software, which was thought to be the best return on investment, was no longer all ⁠of a sudden.

"An important question of stock picking now is: what is the risk of disruption from AI on this business model? - this ‌is not the usual question you ask ​when you were looking at stocks before. But now this is the first question you want to ask when you open a meeting ⁠with a company."

Banks, which had witnessed sharp losses at the peak of the AI-disruption selloff, were among the top sectoral ‌performers this week. However, those concerns are likely to resurface as investors ​scrutinize ways the ‌technology could affect businesses.

Meanwhile, global markets were monitoring developments in the oil-rich Middle East as President Donald Trump warned Iran it ‌must make a deal over its nuclear program or "really ⁠bad things" ⁠will happen. Defence stocks were marginally higher and has jumped nearly 4% this week.

The focus later in the day will shift to initial business activity surveys out of eurozone economies, along with a key inflation report out of the U.S.

Among others, life sciences firm Siegfried slid 6.7% after its annual revenue slightly missed analyst ​expectations.

Italian insurer Unipol gained 6% after reporting a 36.8% rise in its full-year profit. Companies that reported results on Friday ⁠also included ‌French food group Danone and UK's Anglo American.

(Reporting by Johann M ​Cherian ‌in Bengaluru; Editing by Nivedita Bhattacharjee and Vijay Kishore)

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This article was written by Johann M Cherian from Reuters and was legally licensed through the DiveMarketplace by Industry Dive.