European equities pushed higher on Friday, regaining ground after ending the previous session largely in negative territory.
Germany’s DAX advanced about 0.5%, while the UK’s FTSE 100 rose 0.2% and France’s CAC 40 edged 0.1% higher as investors weighed fresh economic data alongside company-specific news.
On the macro front, figures from Destatis showed German industrial production fell sharply in December, sliding 1.9% month on month after a 0.2% increase in November. The decline was significantly steeper than expectations for a modest 0.2% drop. On an annual basis, output contracted by 0.6%, reversing a 0.5% rise recorded the previous month.
In France, data from the customs office indicated a widening trade gap at the end of the year. The country’s foreign trade deficit increased to €4.8 billion in December from €4.0 billion in November, exceeding forecasts for a shortfall of around €4.1 billion, as imports outpaced exports.
At the stock level, Vinci (EU:DG) shares jumped after the infrastructure and construction group reported full-year results that exceeded market expectations. Vinci posted net income attributable to shareholders of €4.90 billion for 2025, or €8.65 per share, up from €4.86 billion, or €8.43 per share, a year earlier.
By contrast, Metlen Energy & Metals (LSE:MTLN) came under heavy pressure after warning that its 2025 EBITDA is now expected to be around 25% lower than previously targeted, despite what it described as solid performance across its core business divisions.

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