Eurozone stock markets were little changed yesterday after gains in much of Asia as traders eyed talks between China and the US they hope will finally resolve a long-running trade war.

Frankfurt was a touch higher and Paris was flat, while London lost one per cent, penalised by a strong pound, which tends to weigh on the earnings of multinationals, and by poorly-received results including from British Gas owner Centrica.

The energy group's share price tumbled after it said that a newly-introduced UK government price cap aimed at lowering the cost of domestic gas and electricity would hurt Centrica's performance this year.

The pound rose against both the dollar and the euro after recovering from early weakness prompted by Fitch warning that it could slash Britain's credit rating owing to the economic hit from a potential no-deal Brexit.

Wall Street shares were lower at the opening bell in New York, weighed down by "a mixed bag of domestic economic and earnings reports", according to Charles Schwab analysts.

In Asia, stock markets mainly climbed on a report that Beijing and Washington were working on an outline for a deal.

Both sides returned to the bargaining table yesterday, with just eight days remaining in a self-imposed deadline to avoid an escalation in the trade war.

"Markets look towards the US-China trade talks for direction," said IG analyst Joshua Mahony.

"Markets are becoming less sensitive to the fact that these talks are taking place, in some ways reflecting the weariness and scepticism that comes with each meeting."

Global equities have enjoyed a stellar start to the year on hopes for the negotiations and expectations the Federal Reserve will ease up on its pace of monetary tightening as growth at home and globally slows.

The upbeat mood was enhanced yesterday as Bloomberg News said US and Chinese negotiators were sketching out a number of memoranda of understanding on key issues including intellectual property and technology transfer.

Without naming sources, the report said no final agreement was expected in Washington this week but that China's top negotiator Liu He would meet US President Donald Trump tomorrow.

While there has been no concrete sign of progress in the trade talks, Trump has insisted the talks are going "very well" and has indicated he could push back a deadline for a deal to be done.

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