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Miners, mixed earnings pull European stocks away from recent peaks

The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt

By Anisha Sircar and Ambar Warrick

(Reuters) -European stocks slipped from near record highs on Wednesday, with miners leading losses after concerns over China hit metal prices, while mixed corporate earnings reports and an upcoming central bank meeting kept investors on edge.

The pan-European STOXX 600 closed 0.4% lower at 474.04 points after coming close to a record high on Tuesday.

Miners led losses, falling 1.9% as Chinese intervention to address skyrocketing commodity prices hit coal and metal rates. [IRONORE/] [MET/L]

A mixed batch of earnings also weighed, with Deutsche Bank down 6.9% despite posting a better-than-expected quarterly profit, as investors questioned the bank's reliance on volatile money spinners.

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French payments firm Worldline dropped 15.9% to the bottom of the STOXX 600 on disappointing results and guidance.

British bluechip stocks fell 0.3%, while locally-focussed midcap stocks edged higher after the government flagged an improving outlook for the economy. [.L]

Traders are now focused on the European Central Bank (ECB) meeting on Thursday, where policymakers are expected to keep interest rate unchanged and push back on market inflation forecasts.

"After such strong highs we have seen on indices, I'm not surprised that we see a kind of breather today ahead of the ECB meeting," said Roland Kaloyan, head of European equity strategy at SocGen.

"The ECB will remain accommodative, but again, you always have the risk that any message or any word could be misunderstood or misinterpreted by the market."

Soaring inflation expectations are likely to put pressure on the central bank as it considers how much support to provide the euro zone economy once its pandemic bond-buying expires next March.

Despite the uncertainty, the STOXX 600 is on track to gain more than 4% in October, as stronger-than-expected quarterly results countered concerns about inflation and a global energy crunch.

Profits for Europe Inc are expected to increase 52% in the third quarter to 99.8 billion euros ($115.8 billion) from the same quarter last year, latest Refinitiv I/B/E/S data showed, an improvement from last week's 47.6% growth forecast.

Among the day's gainers, French household equipment maker SEB jumped 12.4% to the top of the STOXX 600 after posting better-than-expected third quarter results.

Electrical equipment maker Schneider Electric rose 2.4% after it reported better-than-expected quarterly revenue growth.

Germany's Puma added 3.6% after hiking its 2021 sales outlook even as it cautioned that a lockdown in Vietnam, port congestion and container shortages were hurting its supply chain.

(Reporting by Anisha Sircar in BengaluruEditing by Anil D'Silva and Mark Potter)