BRUSSELS, July 27 — European shares slipped today with travel stocks leading the declines after Britain imposed a quarantine on travellers returning from Spain, where cases of the novel coronavirus have surged in the last few weeks.

The pan-European STOXX 600 was down 0.2 per cent but came off early lows.

Travel & leisure dropped 2.9 per cent, with UK-based airlines and tour operators such as TUI AG, Easyjet Plc, British Airways-owner IAG SA falling between 9.4 per cent and 13.4 per cent.

The broader index sank to a two-month low, further cementing its status as the worst performer in Europe this year.

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Europe’s biggest holiday company TUI said on Sunday it had decided to cancel all holidays to mainland Spain up to and including Sunday August 9.

Spanish stocks fell 1.3 per cent, while the Irish stocks benchmark dropped 1.1 per cent after airline Ryanair cut its annual passenger target by a quarter and warned a second wave of Covid-19 infections could lower that further.

Lufthansa and Air France fell 6.4 per cent and 4.0 per cent, respectively, after the British government said it was watching the situation in Germany and France closely.

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“There’s always been this concern when lockdown measures were released that we would have a resurgence in cases and reimposition of social restrictions,” said Alastair George, head strategist at Edison Investment Research.

“It does not just impact people going on holidays as the risk is economies have to shut down again. But that has not happened, which is why you have a measured response to the news over the weekend.”

Germany’s DAX was among the few gainers, helped by a 3.4 per cent gain for software group SAP SE after it announced plans to spin off and float Qualtrics, the US specialist in measuring online customer sentiment.

Markets also recouped some losses after the Ifo Institute’s survey showed German business morale improved further in July after posting a record increase in June, suggesting that firms expect Europe’s largest economy to recover from the coronavirus shock if a second wave of infections is avoided.

Global stock markets were largely mixed as ties between the world’s two largest economies deteriorated after China took over the premises of the US consulate in the southwestern city of Chengdu in retaliation for China’s ouster last week from its consulate in Houston, Texas.

French car parts group Faurecia fell 3.3 per cent after CEO Patrick Koller told a local radio that there were more uncertainties regarding the fourth quarter after reporting a first-half operating loss due to the Covid-19 crisis. — Reuters