European equity markets opened in the green on Tuesday 8 April after a four-day losing streak hit investor sentiment across the globe.

As of 09:11 CET, the Stoxx 600 index was about 1% higher and almost every sector was back in positive territory. Key regional indexes also climbed again with Germany’s Dax up 1.09%, France’s CAC 40 up 1.66%, while Italy’s FTSE MIB rose 1.66%. In Spain, the IBEX 35 opened higher, up 0.52% – and in London, the FTSE 100 also went back into positive territory, climbing 1.03%.

The calmer start on European markets follows a punishing trading session on Monday, although investor sentiment remains cautious as the global tariff spat and uncertainty over US President Donald Trump’s next move continues to weigh on confidence.

“Investors need to take each day as it comes, and Tuesday got off to a good start… Crude oil also increased by 1.2% to $61.45 a barrel, while gold edged 1.8% higher to $3,028 per ounce,” Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, said in an email note sent to Euronews.

“These are small wins in terms of asset movements but big wins for the state of the broader market given the bloodbath we’ve endured since ‘Liberation Day’ last week. The stabilising of markets will be welcomed with open arms.”

Mould also said that the price movements should inject some positivity into markets and help investors to stop fretting about dents to their portfolio over the past week.

“Markets could stay fragile for days and weeks to come. It would only take a new sign of aggression from Trump or a trading partner fighting back hard to cause upset again. Market recoveries can quickly lose momentum if investors lose faith in a remedy to the situation that caused the original sell-off,” he added.

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Meanwhile, early Tuesday, China’s Commerce Ministry said it would “fight to the end” and take unspecified countermeasures against the United States to safeguard its own interests after President Donald Trump threatened an additional 50% tariff on Chinese imports.

By early afternoon Tokyo time, the Nikkei 225 was up 5% at 32,691.34.

Hong Kong also recovered some lost ground, but not anything close to the 13.2% dive on Monday that gave the Hang Seng its worst day since 1997, during the Asian financial crisis.

The Hang Seng gained 1.6% to 20,140.78, while the Shanghai Composite index jumped 0.9% to 3,124.77.

South Korea’s Kospi edged 0.1% higher to 2,331.80, while the S&P/ASX 200 climbed 1.7% to 7,471.10.