Europe’s major stock markets mostly slid yesterday, as investors set aside a bright performance in Asia and paused following last week’s bumper gains, dealers said.

“European stocks have had a stuttering start to the week, with strong Asian gains failing to inspire confidence closer to home,” said IG analyst Joshua Mahony.

“Markets [in Europe] are treading water after a week of substantial gains across global stocks.

“Much of the focus has been on US-China trade talks, and while we saw little by way of notable breakthroughs, the tone and willingness to find a solution is certainly improving,” Mr Mahony added.

London and Frankfurt stocks each dipped 0.2 per cent in value but Paris eked out a slender gain of 0.1 per cent around the half-way mark.

The dollar rose versus the yen but fell against the euro and pound.

UK markets showed little reaction after seven MPs from Britain’s opposition Labour Party on Monday broke away in protest at leader Jeremy Corbyn’s support for Brexit and his failure to stamp out anti-Semitism.

Sentiment was subdued also with US markets closed for the Presidents’ Day holiday.

“With US markets out for the Presidents’ Day holiday, volumes are likely to start to diminish in the afternoon session,” noted CMC Markets analyst Michael Hewson.

Elsewhere, Asian equities rallied as investors grow increasingly confident that China and the US will eventually hammer out a deal to end their long-running trade war.

Asian bourses advanced “thanks to growing optimism over the US-China trade talks”, said Russ Mould, investment director at stockbroker AJ Bell.

While talks ended on Friday in Beijing with no deal, negotiators shift to Washington this week with Donald Trump saying discussions were going “extremely well” and suggesting he could extend a March 1 truce deadline for an agreement to be reached.

The high-level discussions between the economic superpowers are expected to yield a memorandum of understanding ahead of a meeting between Mr Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping to finalise a pact.

The positive news comes at a crucial time as China’s economy stutters and the global outlook looks less certain, with the US also showing signs of slowing.

European and US stock markets had leapt on Friday as positive signs emerged from US-China trade talks aimed at averting an escalation of a tariff war between the world’s top two economies.

Markets had jumped also on a bipartisan deal to avert another US government shutdown, and also on the Federal Reserve’s recent dovish tone on interest rates.

In commodities yesterday, world oil prices held steady after soaring last week on signs that Opec members and other major producers led by Russia are cutting output.

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