European shares closed lower for the second consecutive day yesterday, after a choppy session in which banking stocks retreated from earlier gains and chemical makers slipped.

The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index of top shares closed down 0.5 per cent at 968.67 points after being up as much as 976.79 points earlier in a session that saw the index jump around after US gross domestic product and jobless claims data were released.

The US GDP figures were not as bad as expected," said Peter Dixon, an economist at Commerzbank. "Markets have demonstrated a lot of volatility in recent days and I think markets will see-saw on the back of good and bad news."

"US jobless figures were a little bit worse than expected, but still were an improvement on the previous week.

These numbers are volatile and I would not want to base any kind of assessment on these numbers," Mr Dixon said. US jobless claims fell last week to 570,000, slightly above the 565,000 predicted by analysts.

Data also showed that the US economy contracted at an annualised rate of 1.0 per cent in the second quarter, the same as its initial reading. Analysts had predicted a downwardly revised reading of -1.5 per cent.

Banks reversed from earlier gains to feature among the worst performers. HSBC, Deutsche Bank, Dexia, Lloyds Banking Group and Royal Bank of Scotland were down 0.8 to 7.8 per cent.

However, Credit Agricole gained 3.7 per cent after it posted better-than-expected, second-quarter profit and said its businesses were well placed despite the tough economic environment.

Chemical stocks were lower. German drugmaker Bayer fell 4.1 per cent after traders pointed to concerns that peer Boehringer Ingelheim may report strong data about its rival drug to Bayer's anti-blood-clotting pill Xarelto.

"Some people are getting worried (that Boehringer Ingelheim) will report data on a drug that is the most serious competitor to Xarelto," a local Frankfurt-based trader said.

Mining stocks slipped as copper lost 0.1 per cent. Antofagasta, Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation, Rio Tinto and Xstrata were 0.4 to 4.1 lower.

Beverages were among the big losers on the index. Diageo was down 4.1 per cent after it warned recovery would come in 2010 at the earliest, prompting it to cut its growth target after it met forecasts with a 10 per cent rise in annual earnings.

On the upside, utilities were the top performers. French power and gas group GDF Suez gained two per cent after it said it was confident it would meet its earnings targets despite the weaker economy that has reduced demand for energy as it predicted better trading by year-end.

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