European stocks opened higher on Thursday, with the market’s attention firmly fixed on a heavy slate of corporate earnings reports that are providing a fresh and crucial set of clues on business activity and confidence across the region.
The positive start comes despite a backdrop of rising geopolitical tensions and a mixed session in Asia.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 was up almost 0.3% shortly after the opening bell, with all major indexes in the green.
France’s CAC 40 and Italy’s FTSE MIB were among the leaders, both advancing 0.4%.
A strong day for earnings, a surge for luxury
It is a busy day for corporate earnings in Europe, with giants like Roche, Unilever, and Lloyds Banking Group all reporting.
The German enterprise software firm SAP released its earnings late on Wednesday, reporting a 7% increase in third-quarter revenue that narrowly missed analyst expectations.
However, the company saw a powerful 22% gain in its cloud revenue, a sign of its increasing market share in the AI and data cloud space.
“For Q4 we are executing against a strong pipeline – which gives us confidence in our accelerating total revenue growth ambition for 2026,” CEO Christian Klein said in a statement. SAP’s shares opened 2% higher.
The most dramatic move of the morning came from the French luxury titan Kering. The Gucci-owner’s shares jumped over 8% after its quarterly revenue beat expectations, a sign of resilience in a complex market.
While sales at its flagship Gucci brand came in just shy of forecasts, the overall strength of the group was enough to ignite a powerful rally.
Not all earnings were positive, however. The British lender Lloyds Banking Group reported a pre-tax profit of almost £1.2 billion, a figure that was down from £1.8 billion in the same period last year.
The decline was driven by a new £800 million charge related to the UK’s car finance misselling scandal.
Geopolitical tensions and the price of oil are in sharp focus
While earnings are driving individual stock moves, the broader market is also keeping a close eye on the geopolitical landscape. Oil prices are a key focus after they jumped around 3% in the previous session.
The surge was a direct reaction to the Trump administration imposing a fresh round of sanctions on Russia’s two largest crude companies, Rosneft and Lukoil, with the White House citing Moscow’s “lack of serious commitment to a peace process.”
The European Union is also set to announce its own new sanctions package on Russia on Wednesday, a move that is expected to include a ban on liquefied natural gas imports.
“We really want to deprive Russia of the means to fund this war to end this war,” Kaja Kallas, the EU’s high representative for foreign affairs, told CNBC.
This European drama is playing out against a mixed session in Asia and a weaker tone in US stock futures, as investors digest a raft of their own earnings reports and the persistent fear of a renewed US-China trade war.
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