European stocks close lower; medtech firms slide on U.S. medical device imports probe

Sep 25, 2025 | Uncategorized

Europe-listed stocks moved lower on Thursday, as concern over U.S. trade policy reared its head once again.

The pan-European Stoxx 600

Retail was a bright spot, with the Stoxx Europe 600 Retail index advancing 0.42%. Fashion retail giant H&M‘s shares surged 9.8% to top the Stoxx 600, after the company’s third-quarter earnings beat expectations.

hide content
H&M share price

Meanwhile, shares of medical technology firms sold off after the Trump administration opened a national security probe into imports of medical devices, robotics and industrial machinery — raising concerns that those goods could be the next target of the White House’s tariffs regime.

Siemens HealthineersPhilipsConvatec

hide content
Convatec share price

In other news, shares of British investment firm Petershill Partners

Shares of software giant SAPEuropean Commission launched an antitrust probe into its practices.

“SAP believes that its policies and actions are fully in line with competition rules. However, we take the issues raised seriously and we are working closely with the EU Commission to resolve them,” SAP said in a statement on Thursday.

“We do not anticipate the engagement with the European Commission to result in material impacts on our financial performance.”

Meanwhile, a consortium of nine European banks, including UniCreditINGDanske Banklaunch a new euro-denominated stablecoin next year.  

Jobless data, consumer confidence

In the U.S., the Labor Department’s latest weekly jobs data showed jobless claims fell to 218,000 for the week ended Sept. 20, down 14,000 from the previous week. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said on Tuesday that the cooling labor market was overriding concerns about sticky inflation, prompting the central bank’s first interest rate cut of the year.

Back in Europe, investors were also monitoring consumer confidence figures.

In their report on consumer confidence in Germany, published Thursday morning, GfK and the Nuremberg Institute for Market Decisions (NIM) said the downward trend in the consumer climate had halted due to improved income expectations.

However, Rolf Bürkl, head of consumer climate at NIM, said that market watchers should approach the data with caution.

“Whether this marks the beginning of a sustained turnaround is more than uncertain. The consumer climate remains at an extremely low level,” he explained in the report. “The geopolitical situation, concerns about jobs, and renewed fears of inflation are likely hinder a thorough recovery at the moment.”

International: Top News And Analysis

Read the full article <a href="Read More” target=”_blank”>here.

No related tags found.