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UPDATE 2-European shares hit by Daimler warning, weak economic data

* Daimler says emissions costs to hit 2020-21 margins

* Germany avoids recession, growing 0.1% q/q

* China, Japan numbers point to more weakness

* Qiagen soars on report of Thermo Fisher deal (Updates to close, adds new quote)

By Agamoni Ghosh

Nov 14 (Reuters) - European shares closed lower on Thursday as a warning from German carmaker Daimler and weak economic data from major economies added to concerns about a global slowdown.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index slipped 0.3%, with most sectors in the red and automakers leading losses, down 1.4%.

Daimler dropped about 3%, the biggest decline on Germany's blue-chip index after the carmaker said tougher emissions rules would hit earnings in 2020 and 2021. It said it was cutting staff costs at its Mercedes-Benz business to seek more than 1 billion euros ($1.1 billion) in savings.

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"It's been well known that the shift to electric will be a difficult one and there is a no real timeline on when the companies will start seeing a turnaround," said Ken Odeluga, market analyst at City Index in London.

Subdued global auto sales have hit German carmakers with weakness in China - the biggest market - casting a pall, while a new emissions-testing regime added to the sector's pains.

To add to the dour mood, Germany, Europe's biggest economy, narrowly avoided slipping into recession in the third quarter, while growth indicators from China and Japan remained weak, stoking fears of a global slowdown.

The gloom took European shares further away from a four-year peak hit last week driven by optimism about the chances of a 'phase one' trade deal between the United States and China and some better-than-expected earnings.

"The initial optimism that we were seeing for the first phase to be completed seems to be a bit overoptimistic now as there seem to be some stumbling blocks," said Michael Baker, analyst at ETX Capital.

Defensive plays like utilities, healthcare and telecoms, which investors had taken refuge in earlier in the week when trade uncertainties hit risk appetite, started to wear out. All were down between 0.3% and 1%.

London's FTSE 100 slid 0.8% as a 6% drop in private equity company 3i and a handful of stocks trading ex-dividend overshadowed an earnings-driven jump in luxury brand Burberry which climbed 3%.

STOXX 600's biggest gainer was genetic testing company Qiagen, up 14% after Bloomberg reported scientific instruments maker Thermo Fisher Scientific had approached the company about a potential deal. (Reporting by Agamoni Ghosh, Sruthi Shankar and Susan Mathew in Bengaluru; Editing by Bernard Orr and Susan Fenton)