European shares rose yesterday, quickly recovering from losses sparked by stronger-than-exp-ected US inflation data, as solid company and economic updates kept investors confident.

The STOXX 600 index rose 1.1 per cent, having earlier lost as much as 0.3 per cent following the release of figures showing US consumer prices had risen more than expected in January, bolstering expectations for faster interest rate hikes.

Similar expectations sparked a heavy sell-off last week, but the pan-European index managed to reverse course and hit a four-day high yesterday, as Wall Street showed a muted reaction to the US figures. The European index however remains down 3.8 per cent so far this year.

Data out of Germany earlier in the day showed Europe's biggest economy was set to power ahead in 2018, while a Thomson Reuters study said fourth-quarter European earnings growth expectations were revised upwards after 15 weeks of downgrades.

The European index remains down 3.8 per cent so far this year

One Milan-based trader said barring a major stock market correction, he was confident European equities could outperform Wall Street given monetary policy in the eurozone was still expansionary. Other investors, however, appear to be betting on a heavy pullback in equities after years of strong gains.

Bridgewater Associates was reported to have taken short bets against major German companies Deutsche Bank, Allianz and BASF.

Those three all ended higher.

Top gainer on the STOXX was silicon wafer group Siltronic, up 7.9 after a positive note from Credit Suisse. Second was French electrical parts distributor Rexel, which rose after a trading update.

Food packaging group Huhtamaki rose 3.5 per cent after it released fourth-quarter results, and Dutch supplement maker DSM jumped 2.9 per cent after giving an upbeat outlook for 2018.

In banking, Credit Suisse was a clear leader, up 3.7 per cent after posting a third straight annual loss which was smaller than expected. Investment bank Natixis added 0.1 per cent after reporting an unexpected rise in quarterly net profit..

Its French peer Credit Agricole was down 2.8 per cent after results. Other French stocks were among the top performers, with retirement home operator Orpea up 5.1 per cent after reporting a solid outlook.

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