By Sruthi Shankar
(Reuters) - European stocks bounced back sharply on Monday as investors snapped up beaten-down shares in the banking sector that hit a record low last week and data gave signs of pick-up in the Chinese economy.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index <.STOXX> jumped 2.2%, recording its biggest percentage gain since mid-June, after last week's 3.6% drop.
The broader banks index <.SX7P> surged 5.6% in its first session of gain in eight days.
HSBC Holdings
Commerzbank
Investors have shunned Europe's banking sector hit by a cocktail of lower global borrowing costs, rising bad loans due to the economic downturn and a dirty money scandal that made it the worst performer this year with a 42% decline.
"There's a chance for tactical rebalancing, but not a structural rally in banks," said Dhaval Joshi, European investment strategist at BCA Research.
Investors have been wary about a second wave of coronavirus infections hampering business activity in Europe, while uncertainty about more U.S. fiscal stimulus and a Brexit trade deal have all sparked bouts of volatility in financial markets this month.
"With each of these issues remaining 'live' in the near term, we expect markets to remain choppy for a bit longer," Morgan Stanley's equity strategist Graham Secker wrote in a note.
However, the worst weekly selloff in three months drove bargain hunters to step in, while data showed profits at China's industrial firms grew for the fourth straight month in August helped the trade-sensitive German index <.GDAXI> outperform.
Europe's auto <.SXAP> and industrial sectors <.SXNP>, heavily reliant on Chinese demand, rose more than 3.5%.
ArcelorMittal SA
Sonova Holding AG
London-based spirits maker Diageo
(Reporting by Sruthi Shankar in Bengaluru; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta and Angus MacSwan)