LONDON — European stocks edged higher at the opening bell on Friday as investors digest the end of a choppy month.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 saw a positive start to the session, with major bourses in the green and sectors mixed.
November has been a volatile month for equities with fears of stretched AI valuations resurfacing, causing a rollercoaster of relief rallies and sell-offs adding to insights from the latest earnings season and uncertainty over monetary policy.
However, global markets were buoyed this week by rising expectations of an interest rate cut by the U.S. Federal Reserve when it next meets on Dec. 9-10.
Shares in Germany’s Puma soared more than 18% on Thursday following a media report that Chinese sports multinational Anta Sports is preparing an acquisition bid. However, the stock fell 3% in early dealmaking on Friday.
Delivery Hero also sat at the higher end of the index through the previous trading session. The German food delivery company gained 7.3% at the opening bell on Friday following a shareholder call for a strategic review, according to Bloomberg reporting.
Investors will be watching defense stock moves on Friday as U.S. officials continue to attempt to broker a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir Putin broke his silence on the plan on Thursday and said his country is ready for “serious talks.”
An overall positive month for the Stoxx 600
The benchmark notched upwards for the fifth consecutive month in November, with healthcare-related stocks leading the index. Roche and Bayer performed well after each posting strong trial data, while France’s Abivax is up well over 1000% year-to-date amid promising data around its ulcerative colitis drug.
Tech names experienced swings as fears around an AI-fueled bubble and stretched valuations in the U.S. spilled over to Europe. ASMI, which supplies equipment to chipmakers, is down nearly 15% on the month, while Dutch chip equipment maker ASML is around 2% lower over the same time period.
Defense stocks have also seen losses, with Germany’s Hensoldt down by nearly 25% this month amid delayed growth guidance at its capital markets day.
In terms of data, a handful of European member states are expected to release preliminary inflation data on Friday.
U.K. car production data from The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders came early in the day, revealing a fall of 23.8% year-on-year in October 2025, following a cyberattack on Jaguar Land Rover that halted production for over two weeks.
Investors will be watching Stateside commodities on Friday after a cooling issue at CME Group’s CyrusOne data centers halted trading in futures markets.
“Support is working to resolve the issue in the near term and will advise clients of Pre-Open details as soon as they are available,” CME Group said in a statement on its website.
Asia-Pacific markets traded mixed Friday, while U.S. stock futures were little changed Thursday night during a holiday-shortened week. The Nasdaq Composite is on track to end a seven-month winning streak.
— CNBC’s Jordan Butt contributed to this report.
