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LIVE MARKETS-More investors look at dialling down risk

(Refiles to fix typo in headline)

Jan 30 (Reuters) - Welcome to the home for real time coverage of European equity markets

brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters and anchored today by Helen Reid. Reach her on

Messenger to share your thoughts on market moves: helen.reid.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net

MORE INVESTORS LOOK AT DIALLING DOWN RISK (1054 GMT)

PIMCO’s European global wealth management team say they've found some of their financial

intermediary clients in Europe have been looking at reducing risk in their portfolios.

This has proven tricky in an environment of zero or negative real returns on cash, PIMCO

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adds.

But they have two potential solutions: low volatility absolute return strategies and core

bond strategies, especially those with a U.S. focus.

"Increasing core bond exposure is the more contrarian view; many clients say they plan to

decrease allocations in the coming year," Ryan P. Blute, managing director and head of PIMCO’s

global wealth management business in EMEA, says in a note.

"However, core bonds can play an important diversification role in a portfolio, and U.S.

Treasuries in particular remain a source of high quality duration, historically outperforming

when there are significant declines in equity or credit markets."

(Kit Rees)

*****

TECH OUTPERFORMS, BUT APPLE AND SUPPLIERS REMAIN UNDER PRESSURE(1038 GMT)

While tech is outperforming the market today in a recovery from yesterday's jitters,

Frankfurt-listed shares in Apple (NasdaqGS: AAPL - news) are falling 1.6 percent to hit their lowest

in three months.

The bearish sentiment from that Nikkei report we mentioned earlier still seems to be taking

its toll, and it's interesting to note that iPhone suppliers Dialog Semiconductor (LSE: 0OLN.L - news) , AMS

and ASMI are among the worst-performing in the sector.

(Helen Reid)

*****

IS A CORRECTION ON THE CARDS? (0845 GMT)

A negative day like today lays bare investor concerns about a more potent pullback in equity

markets.

"Given current complacency and positioning, when things go wrong there may be quite a

violent market reaction and I think we are moving more into that territory in 2018," Nicholas

Brooks, head of research and investment strategy at Intermediate Capital Group, said, adding

that he thinks we are due a correction.

Brooks recommends moving into lower-beta sectors and companies and seeking out businesses

with high cash flows in relatively defensive sectors.

(Kit Rees and Tom Pfeiffer)

*****

OPENING SNAPSHOT: CYCLICAL SLIDE PULLS EUROPEAN SHARES LOWER (0817 GMT)

European shares have opened lower thanks to falls among commodities-related sectors and

financials - almost all sectors are in the red. Is this the start of a pullback?

But elsewhere it's all about earnings, with a sprinkling of M&A. Alfa Laval (LSE: 0NNF.L - news) and

Swatch are the biggest risers after their updates, while UBM (LSE: UBM.L - news) is also up there

after Informa (Frankfurt: A114PL - news) confirmed its deal with the conference organiser.

Here's your opening snapshot:

(Kit Rees)

*****

WHAT'S ON THE RADAR FOR EUROPEAN STOCKS (0750 GMT)

Taking its cue from Wall Street and Asia, Europe’s stock market is set to suffer losses with

futures down 0.6 to 0.8 percent across the major benchmarks. A slide in Apple shares was the

catalyst for the weaker U.S. session, after a Nikkei report said the tech giant would halve its

iPhone X production.

The report came out during European trading hours on Monday and weighed on iPhone suppliers

including AMS (IOB: 0QWC.IL - news) , Dialog Semiconductor and STMicro, but there may be

further pressure on the chipmakers and tech stocks in this session as investors grow skittish

about high valuations and the equity ‘melt-up’ with the MSCI World entering its longest ever

period without a correction of more than 5 percent.

Mining stocks could also be a weight, indicated lower in pre-market as base metals lose

ground with the strengthening dollar.

Under the benchmark level, a slew of company results should keep traders busy today.

Europe’s top tech company, SAP (Amsterdam: AP6.AS - news) , will be a focus after its results came in shy of

expectations and it bought a U.S. software firm for $2.4 billion. The stock is indicated down 1

percent in pre-market.

Swatch meanwhile is seen rising 3 to 4 percent after impressive guidance and

accelerating sales.

(Helen Reid)

*****

EARLY MORNING ROUND-UP (0739 GMT)

Here are the company headlines grabbing our attention in Europe this morning:

SAP talks up cloud business, buys $2.4 bln U.S. sales software firm

Debt-ridden Altice (Other OTC: ATSVF - news) to further reduce share capital

Philips (Amsterdam: PHIA.AS - news) delivers on Q4 sales growth on higher order intake

SCA (Swiss: SCAB.SW - news) 2017 operating profit just beats forecasts, dividend higher

France's Elis doubles targeted cost synergies from Berendsen (LSE: BRSN.L - news) acquisition

Swatch "very positive" on 2018 after H2 sales accelerate

Renault (LSE: 0NQF.L - news) -Nissan group pips VW to become top-selling carmaker in 2017

Cevian Capital raises Ericsson (Hanover: ERCB.HA - news) stake to 9 pct

PZ Cussons Says Profitability Expected To Improve In H2

Volkswagen (IOB: 0P6N.IL - news) faces inquiry call over diesel fume tests on monkeys

Biggest investor in Italy's Safilo has no intention to change its stake

Luxottica (Milan: LUX.MI - news) sees strong adj. net profit growth after FY sales meet guidance

Hedge fund Elliott increases stake in Fox takeover target Sky (Amsterdam: BK8.AS - news)

Alfa Laval CEO sees slower Marine unit demand in Q1 after bumper Q4

(Kit Rees and Tom Pfeiffer)

*****

FUTURES POINT TO PULL-BACK IN EUROPEAN STOCKS (0710 GMT)

As expected futures have gapped significantly at the open - down 0.5 to 0.7 percent across

the board now. Looks like the risk-off mood across the Atlantic (Shanghai: 600558.SS - news) will sour today's trading in

Europe as well. The chipmakers and Apple suppliers will again be ones to watch, as will all

those cyclical sectors leading the rally year-to-date.

(Helen Reid)

*****

CORRECTION BECOMING INCREASINGLY LIKELY, SAYS GS (0656 GMT)

The S&P 500 has had the longest period since 1929 without a correction of more than 5

percent, Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS-PB - news) finds, saying a correction is overdue. The MSCI World has also entered

its longest period ever without a correction of more than 5 percent.

"As inflows into equities rise strongly alongside increasing optimism, the equity market

becomes more vulnerable to disappointments," GS writes.

They're staying bullish, though - seeing a sharp correction as more likely than a full-blown

bear market.

One interesting observation they make is that this year the S&P 500 and the VIX volatility

index have been rising together. "The increase in volatility amid a market rally may, in part,

reflect increasing risks, and may also reflect a bullish willingness to spend premium to add to

upside exposure."

GS recommends buying on dips, but would also buy hedges as protection.

If you're more of a glass half full kind of person, then you can keep looking at global

growth - running at above 5%, the strongest pace since 2010 - and global earnings - where

expectations are finally being revised up sharply.

(Helen Reid)

*****

SAP ANNOUNCES $2.4 BLN ACQUISITION, ALTICE TO FURTHER CUT SHARE CAPITAL (0636 GMT)

With (Other OTC: WWTH - news) tech a notable focus yesterday, and ahead of the U.S. giants reporting later this week,

all eyes will be on results from European firms in the sector to see how they stack up.

Germany's SAP, Europe's top tech company, just announced a $2.4 billion

acquisition of U.S. cloud software company Callidus Software Inc (NasdaqGM: CALD - news) - a sweetener on 2017

results which came in at the lower end of market expectations.

The firm's guidance was in line with analysts' expectations - but we'll have to see what

they make of this purchase.

At the intersection of health and tech, Dutch firm Philips reported Q4 sales growth

in line with expectations.

Elsewhere in stocks to watch today there's telecoms and cable group Altice which

is reducing its share capital to help improve returns while it restructures.

And it's a sad day for Volkswagen whose position as world's top-selling carmaker

was just nabbed by the Renault-Nissan alliance.

(Helen Reid)

*****

MORNING CALL: TAKING CUE FROM WALL ST AND ASIA, EUROPEAN STOCKS TO FALTER (0618 GMT)

Good morning and welcome to Live Markets.

Spreadbetters are calling European stocks markedly lower after a weaker U.S. session spread

a somewhat more bearish mood to Asian trading as well.

A slide in Apple shares was the catalyst for a broad-based pull-back on Wall Street. The

tech stock fell 1.6 percent on a Nikkei report Apple will halve its iPhone X production target,

causing the Dow and the S&P 500 to suffer their biggest one-day declines in around 5 months.

Asian stocks then retreated from their record highs, while the dollar found some support as

U.S. bond yields rose.

Spreadbetters call the FTSE down 30 points at 7,641.1 points, the DAX 51 points lower at

13,273.2 points and the CAC 40 down 16 points at 5,505.4.

(Helen Reid)

*****

(Reporting by Danilo Masoni, Helen Reid, Kit Rees and Julien Ponthus)