By Sruthi Shankar
(Reuters) - European shares slid in thin summer trading on Friday as travel stocks took a hit after Britain added more countries from the continent to its quarantine list, while weak retail sales data from China raised doubts over the pace of an economic recovery.
The pan-European STOXX 600 (STOXX) fell 1.6%, with travel and leisure (SXTP) dropping 3.0%, the biggest sectoral decliner. Banks (SX7P), oil and gas firms (SXEP) and construction & materials companies (SXOP) fell over 2%.
UK-based airlines and tour operators TUI (DE:TUIGn) (L:TUIT), Easyjet (L:EZL), British Airways-owner IAG (L:ICAG) fell between 6% and 7.6% after the UK imposed a 14-day quarantine on arrivals from France, beginning Saturday.
It also added the Netherlands, Malta and three other countries to the list.
France, the second-most popular overseas destination after Spain for Britons, warned that it would reciprocate. Paris-listed shares (FCHI) fell 2.0%, with Air France KLM (PA:AIRF) dropping 5.9%.
"What we have got is a significant amount of uncertainty over the evolution of coronavirus pandemic, which is maintaining a risk premium for the transportation, leisure and hospitality sectors," said Alastair George, head strategist at Edison Investment Research.
Global markets were sluggish as China's retail sales showed a surprise drop in July, while the factory sector's recovery struggled to pick up pace, dimming prospects of a speedy rebound from the coronavirus crisis.
Official data, due for release at 0900 GMT, is likely to confirm that euro zone economy suffered its deepest contraction on record in the second quarter.
Meanwhile, senior officials from China and the United States will hold a video conference on Saturday to review their Phase 1 trade deal signed in January, amid souring diplomatic relations between the two countries.
Investors also await progress in negotiations over U.S. economic stimulus, a factor that has helped push U.S. stocks to near all-time highs.
Despite Friday's pullback, European stocks are on course for their second straight week of gains on optimism over the development of a COVID-19 vaccine and more stimulus for ailing global economies.
Among top individual movers, German container shipping line Hapag-Lloyd (DE:HLAG) surged 10.3% as it nearly doubled net profit in the first half of 2020 and kept its full-year outlook intact.
Daimler (DE:DAIGn) slipped 1.3% as it reached agreements costing nearly $3 billion to settle investigations by U.S. regulators over a software to cheat diesel emissions tests.