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Europe midday: Shares give up gains ahead of US CPI data

By Frank Prenesti

Date: Tuesday 12 Aug 2025

(Sharecast News) - European shares gave up morning gains on Tuesday after the US and China extended their tariff truce by another three months and traders eyed US inflation data later in the day.
The pan-regional Stoxx 600 index was flat at 1203 BST 546, with all major bourses following suit. Germany's DAX slipped into the red and was down 0.4%, while France's CAC 40 gained 0.12%.

US President Donald Trump, who is waging a global trade war, and China's commerce ministry both announced the truce extension until November as they seek to avert a damaging economic conflict.

The US authoritarian and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping are scheduled to meet later this year.

''There's more optimism in the air as a tariff truce between the US and China holds, with hopes the global economy will withstand the trade blow a little better. Oil prices have crept higher in expectation of higher demand for energy around the world," said Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Susannah Streeter.

"A longer-lasting trade deal with between China and the US looks to be on the cards, after Trump granted another extension to talks amid a warming up of relations between the two nations. The delay on imposing crippling US tariffs on Chinese goods will be welcome news, especially for American retailers in the run-up to the crucial Christmas season."

"The latest US inflation reading will be closely watched later and is already set to indicate the creeping effect of tariffs, with CPI expected to rise 0.2% in July, while core CPI, which strips out volatile food and fuel prices expected to edge up by around 0.3%."

In equity news, Spirax Group surged 12%, after the company's first-half results beat expectations.

Tecan jumped as the Swiss lab instrument market also posted results.

Vestas Wind Systems gained after winning new US orders, while Sartorius rose 3.6% after broker Jefferies upgraded the pharmaceutical equipment supplier's rating to 'buy" from 'hold'.

Reporting by Frank Prenesti for Sharecast.com

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