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European shares decline as investors weigh Mideast developments, corporate earnings

By Thomson Reuters Apr 23, 2026 | 2:39 AM

By Ragini Mathur

April 23 (Reuters) – European shares fell on Thursday as renewed shipping concerns in the strategic Strait of Hormuz dampened investor sentiment, while market participants parsed through a wave of corporate earnings reports.

The pan-European STOXX 600 ​index was down 0.4% at 611.53 points, as of 0853 GMT.

Most of the ‌major regional markets mirrored this downward trend, with Germany’s DAX and London’s FTSE 100 dropping 0.6% and 0.8%, respectively.

There was hardly any reprieve in the Middle East conflict as Iran tightened its grip on the Strait of Hormuz, after President Donald Trump made what appeared to be a unilateral announcement ‌on Tuesday ​that the U.S. would extend the Iran ceasefire.

The developments ⁠left markets nervous about whether ⁠the fragile ceasefire would hold.

“The absence of any peace talks between the U.S. and Iran has led investors to price in a longer conflict again, along with a more extended closure of the Strait of Hormuz,” analysts at Deutsche Bank Research ​said.

CORPORATE EARNINGS ON TAP

Investors were navigating the peak of Europe’s corporate earnings season, scrutinizing reports for insights into how the Iran conflict is affecting businesses.

Many companies struck ⁠a cautious tone in their results earlier this ⁠month, citing higher energy prices, supply-chain disruption and slower growth.

Nestle shares jumped ​6.8% on Thursday after the world’s biggest packaged food company maintained full-year organic growth forecast ​of 3%-4%, saying it had seen “very little impact” so far on global ‌business from the Iran war.

Food and beverages sector rose 1.6%.

Telecom sector led sectoral gains with a 2.2% climb. Nokia stock rose 9% to its highest level in 16 years after the network gear maker raised the growth targets for its AI business and beat ⁠first-quarter profit estimates.

Personal and household goods index gained 0.6%. L’Oreal shares jumped 8.4%, on track for their best day since 2008, after the French cosmetics group posted first-quarter sales that ⁠beat analysts’ expectations.

French drugmaker Sanofi ‌rose 3.7% after it reported first-quarter profit and revenue above ⁠market expectations. Healthcare sector edged 0.2% higher.

Energy sector gained 1.1% ​as Brent ‌crude futures were up more than 1% to over $100 a ​barrel.

On the ⁠flip side, travel and banking stocks traded at the bottom, down 2% each.

Axfood shares fell 7.7% after the Swedish food retailer posted first-quarter revenue that missed analysts’ expectations.

Fresh economic data showed business activity in the euro zone suffered a surprise contraction in April with the Iran war sapping demand as prices soared.

(Reporting by Ragini Mathur in Bengaluru; Editing by Rashmi ​Aich and Shreya Biswas)