By Shashwat Chauhan
(Reuters) -UK and Swedish stocks led declines among European peers on Tuesday after data from both countries triggered worries about high interest rates, while China-exposed shares fell as Beijing's policy support did little to boost confidence.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index lost 1% touching a more than one-month low, while both London's FTSE 100 and Stockholm stocks fell over 1%.
Bond yields across Europe jumped, with UK gilts spiking after data showed basic wages in Britain surged to hit a new record growth rate.
The real estate sector, often considered a bond proxy, slid 1.9%, leading sectoral falls.
«The risk is that you might see sticky inflation on the back of this wage growth,» said Andreas Bruckner, European equity strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch (NYSE:BAC).
A separate report showed the pace of inflation in Sweden held steady at 9.3% in July, still too high for the central bank, which is likely to hike its policy rate again at the upcoming meeting in September.
German 10-year bond yield hit a five-month high.
China-exposed miners fell for the fourth straight session, down 1.5% after data from the world's second-largest economy showed retail sales, industrial output and investment growing at a slower-than-expected pace.
Even as China's central bank cut key policy rates on Tuesday, analysts say more support is needed to revitalise growth.
«The negative China sentiment (is) coming through because Europe by nature is an open economy and its export orientation is towards China,» Bruckner said.
Luxury heavyweights LVMH, Hermes and Kering (EPA:PRTP), that have heavy exposure to China, slipped between 1.3% and 1.6%.
HSBC, Europe's largest bank that also does business in China, fell
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