By Barbara Kollmeyer, MarketWatch

MADRID (MarketWatch) -- European stocks got an initial bump out of better-than-expected U.S. jobs data before dropping a day after markets rallied on signals the European Central Bank and Bank of England will leave policy accommodative for some time to come.

The Stoxx Europe 600 index was last down 0.7% to 290.25. On Thursday, the index closed up 2.3%, or 6.69 points, to 292.15, which was the biggest one-day point and percentage gain since April 23. The index is looking at a 2% gain for the week.

Among movers, Sky Deutschland AG jumped over 3% after Goldman Sachs added the pay-TV provider to its conviction-buy list. Shares of Seadrill Ltd. were upgraded to buy from neutral at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, triggering a more than 2% gain for the Stoxx Europe 600 heavyweight offshore driller.

Data from the U.S. showed 195,000 jobs were created in June -- beating forecasts -- and employment gains in the prior two months were stronger than originally expected. Wall Street stocks remained higher, but Europe wasn't following.

Europe stocks backed off Thursday's rally, which came in large part due to ECB President Mario Draghi, who said in a press conference that interest rates in the region will remain low or go even lower for an "extended period of time."

Helping out, the Bank of England, with new Governor Mark Carney at the helm, triggered the biggest rise for U.K. stocks since the autumn of 2011 after a statement from the central bank -- in itself an unusual move -- also eased fears stimulus will be taken away soon.

But some say markets may be jumping the gun on that dovish assessment of those central banks.

"The statement following the BOE rate decision only claimed that they will assess forward guidance for August, which in itself tells us nothing," said Craig Erlam, market analyst at Alpari U.K., in a note.

Erlam said it was always assumed some sort of forward guidance will be issued by the U.K. central bank, and it's the details that matter, of which there were none. "As far as I'm concerned, we're no more clear now than we were this time yesterday," he said.

Erlam also saw no real news from Draghi either, in hindsight. He noted that the central bank failed to give a benchmark -- date, unemployment target or growth target -- along with that lower rate assessment. "I think what we've seen once again is a commitment to nothing, and the markets have just taken the bait," he said.

In a marked difference from the prior session, the German DAX 30 index fell 1.5% to 7,874.80, after a 2% rally the prior session, while the French CAC 40 index fell 0.5% to 3,788.88 after a nearly 3% gain on Thursday.

Data from the U.S. showed 195,000 jobs were created in June -- beating forecasts -- and employment gains in the prior two months were stronger than originally expected. Wall Street stocks remained higher.

Peripheral markets mostly showed losses, with Portugal PSI 20 index down 0.5% to 5,402.92 after gaining 3.7% on Thursday.

Portugal's Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho appears to have kept the coalition government from collapsing, though many say the government remains in a fragile state after four days of political upheaval sparked by the departure of two ministers.

The Spanish IBEX 35 index fell nearly 2% to 7,855.20, with Banco Santander SA (SAN) off 1.8%. BBVA SA (BBVA) fell over 3%.

 
   Greek stocks stood out with a gain of over 2%. The Athens Composite Index   rose over 2% to 841.23. 
 

Mining stocks staged a pullback after the prior-day's rally, with BHP Billiton PLC (BHP) down 2.6%, Glencore Xstrata PLC off 3.6% and Rio Tinto PLC (RIO) down 3.2%. The FTSE 100 index also ceded positive territory to fall 0.2% to 6,410.58. The index rallied 3% on Thursday, its biggest percentage gain since late 2011 on Thursday.

Goldman Sachs said in a note Friday that it recommends going long U.K. equities via the Dec. 13 future for a target of 7,100, saying the economy looks to be on an upswing and monetary policy looks set to ease further. It also sees the euro area stabilizing in the second half of the year.

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