European markets fell on Friday as investors processed the raft of central bank decisions announced Thursday.
The Stoxx 600 provisionally closed the day 1.1% lower, with two sessions of sharp losses taking the index to a near-five week low. All sectors were down except banks, which added 0.7%, with telecoms leading losses with a 2.4% decline.
European markets
The European Central Bank moved its key interest rate from 1.5% to 2% on Thursday and said it would start to shrink its balance sheet by around 15 billion euros ($15.9 billion) every month from March 2023 to the end of the second quarter of the year. Markets retreated following statements that rate hikes would need to continue "significantly at a steady pace."
The Bank of England and the Swiss National Bank also opted to increase their interest rates by 50 basis points as Europe tries to grapple with high inflation.
Euro zone shares posted their worst daily performance in six months following the raises.
The rate increases follow similar moves by the Fed, which raised its benchmark interest rate to the highest level in 15 years Wednesday.
U.S. stocks were lower Friday as investors continued to ditch stocks into year-end on heightened recession fears following the Federal Reserve's unrelenting rate hiking.
Asia-Pacific markets traded mostly lower as recession fears grow.