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European Corporate Outlook Dims Slightly, still Marred by Global Uncertainty

Jan 22 (Reuters) - The outlook for European corporate health has slightly worsened, according ​to forecasts released on Thursday, as relief from ‌U.S. tariffs is outweighed by ongoing geopolitical tensions straining traditional Western alliances.

European firms are expected to report a 4.2% drop in 2025 fourth-quarter earnings, on ‌average, according to LSEG I/B/E/S data, slightly ​worse than ‌the 4.1% decrease analysts expected a week ago.

That would ​be the worst earnings performance in the ‍past seven quarters.

REVENUES ALSO TAKE A HIT

U.S. president Donald Trump ruled out on Wednesday seizing Greenland by force and ⁠said he would not be imposing 10% ‍tariffs on eight European allies after reaching a framework agreement ‌regarding ‌the Arctic island.

Although the details are unclear, the news pushed European stocks higher, with the STOXX 600 index rising around 1% as the current ⁠earnings season gathers ⁠steam.

Still, analysts ​and investors cautioned against complacency, warning of the Trump administration's unpredictable approach to foreign policy.

The outlook for revenues also ‍took a hit and are now expected to shrink 3.5% compared to last year, according to the LSEG data. ​That is worse than the ‍2.9% fall expected last week.

Reporting by Javi West Larrañaga; Editing by Matt Scuffham

Source: Reuters


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