European markets open to close; Bank of England interest rate decision

LONDON — European stocks were slightly higher on Thursday, building on gains made in the previous session.

The pan-European Stoxx 600 was up 0.3% in early trade. Retail stocks were the standout performers, gaining 2.5%, while telecoms fell 0.4%.

The cautiously positive start for European stocks came after gains on Wednesday on the back of strong U.S. economic data that tamed investor fears of a looming recession. The ISM non-manufacturing purchasing managers index showed a surprise rebound in July also prompting U.S. stocks to climb.

Such a move would take borrowing costs to 1.75% as the central bank battles soaring inflation and would be the first half-point hike since it was made independent from the British government in 1997. The anticipated hike comes as U.K. inflation hit a new 40-year high of 9.4% in June.

Elsewhere overnight, Asia-Pacific shares traded higher on Thursday following the rally on Wall Street and as investors moved on from the tensions over U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s controversial visit to Taiwan.

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Meanwhile, U.S. stock futures were roughly flat on Thursday morning after the major averages snapped a two-day slide in the previous regular trading session.

Earnings before the bell came from Credit Agricole, Adidas, Bayer, Lufthansa, Merck, Zalando, Rolls-Royce, Next, Glencore and Adecco Group on Thursday.

Lufthansa shares climbed 6% to lead the Stoxx 600 after the German posted a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss.

At the bottom of the European blue chip index, Danish medical device company Ambu plunged 14% after cutting its margin forecast and announcing that it would lay off around 200 employees.

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