Europe Markets

Europe shares close lower for second day; Ukraine eyed

Europe shares close lower for second day
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Europe shares close lower for second day

European stocks closed lower on Tuesday for a second day running. This followed a selloff on Monday, with investors seeming fearful about the upcoming first quarter earnings season.

The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 Index provisionally closed lower by 0.3 percent at 1,332.46 points, off session lows, on Tuesday.

The basic resources sector saw a rebound, due to a rally in metal prices, and closed higher by around 1.3 percent. The food and beverages sector also did well, closing 1.2 percent higher.

However, most sector closed lower, with construction, media and travel and leisure all ending more than 1 percent down.

Global risk sentiment has been hit after large declines by some high-profile U.S. tech stocks at the start of the week.

Read MoreHere's why a momentum bounce could be looming

U.S. stocks wavered between gains and losses on Tuesday, struggling to reverse a a three-session decline that pushed the into the red for the year on Monday.

The selling has not been confined to the U.S or the tech sector. Sentiment was shaky in Asia on Tuesday, with equity markets finishing mixed.

Read MoreAsia shares mixed following US losses; Japan unchanged after BOJ

Evan Lucas, a market strategist at spread better IG, forecast on Tuesday that more selling could loom.

"With very little on the macro news front, and the U.S. earnings season not starting in earnest until Friday, the bears are likely to overwhelm most of the overvalued stocks on the Nasdaq in the next three days," Lucas said in a morning note.

European markets


Ukraine weighs

In Russia, stocks on the blue-chip MICEX index closed higher by 0.2 percent on Tuesday, despite reports of further violence in Ukraine. Reuters said on Monday that a Russian soldier had shot dead a Ukrainian naval officer in Crimea, citing a Ukrainian navy spokesperson.

Meanwhile, Russia's Foreign Ministry has warned of the possibility of a civil war if Ukraine did not stop its "military preparations."

On the data front, France saw a modest improvement to its budget deficit in February, according to data published on Tuesday. The deficit fell to 25.7 billion euros ($35.3 billion) for the month.

The U.K. economy continued to show recovery, with the release of industrial and manufacturing figures on Tuesday. Both metrics for February came in better than market expectations, and were also better than the month before.

Read MoreUK recovery 'real' but rate hike uncertainty looms

Meanwhile, U.K. insurance stocks took another hit on Tuesday, due to the ongoing fallout from a March 28 report in which the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) appeared to suggest a vast sector review would take place, raising concerns that firms would be badly hit. The FCA soon clarified its comments, but Britain's insurance industry is now urging the regulator to hold a independent inquiry into the leak.

Read MoreUK insurers demand regulator probe after 'blunder'

Why US markets are selling-off
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Why US markets are selling-off

In stocks news, shares rebounded after Monday's selling, as regulators in China approved the sale of its assets to Microsoft; shares provisionally closed higher by 5 percent.

German sugar producer saw its shares finish the day down by around 20 percent after it warned of a profit drop in the year ahead.

Shares of U.K. retailer fell 9.2 percent after founder Mike Ashley reduced his stake in the firm, selling 25 million shares. This helped push the to a two-week low during the session. The index provisionally closed down 0.6 percent.

One of the biggest fallers of the day was the building materials group , which closed down 3 percent after French insurer Groupama sold its 1.8 percent stake in the supplier.

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