By Barbara Kollmeyer, MarketWatch

MADRID (MarketWatch) -- European stock markets, with the exception of Germany, saw a strong weekly rise, although a Friday retreat in the wake of stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs data cut into gains driven by signs major European central banks will maintain accommodative monetary policies.

The Stoxx Europe 600 index dropped 1.3% to close at 288.31. The index extended losses as Wall Street fell after U.S. employment data reinforced expectations the Federal Reserve will move in coming months to scale back stimulus.

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 around a 1.4% gain for the week.

Among movers, Sky Deutschland AG jumped 4.6% after Goldman Sachs added the pay-TV provider to its conviction-buy list. Shares of Seadrill Ltd. rose over 0.7% after an upgrade 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 previous two months were stronger than originally expected. Wall Street stocks fell as investors fretted upbeat jobs data would keep the Federal Reserve on track for tapering sooner rather than later.

And some investors also thought Europe markets perhaps overdid the rally on Thursday that came after ECB President Mario Draghi said in a news conference that interest rates in the region will remain low or could go even lower for an "extended period."

Ahead of him, the Bank of England, with new Gov. 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.

Coming off the most on Friday, the German DAX 30 index dropped 2.4% to 7,806, more than giving back the Thursday rally of more than 2%. Losses for big names such as Bayer AG and BASF SE , off 3% each, took a chunk out of the index.

Data out of Germany on Friday also showed much weaker-than-expected manufacturing orders, after a sharp drop in domestic orders disappointed those hoping to see signs of a domestic investment recovery.

Heino Ruland, a strategist at Ruland Research in Eppstein, Germany, said nothing that Draghi said Thursday surprised him very much and it's very likely that the markets got ahead of themselves. But also, he said German stocks have been suffering from a string of weak data out of China.

"The next growth scenario is going to be the recovery of ailing member states of the euro area, and it's going to pass by Germany," said Ruland who added that that means investors may be paying more attention to auto makers in Italy than Germany, where Volkswagen AG has "a pocket of strength that's looking questionable."

Craig Erlam, market analyst at Alpari U.K., agrees that there may have been too much excitement on Thursday from those central bank meetings. He said Draghi offered no real news in hindsight, noting that the central bank failed to give a benchmark -- date, unemployment target or growth target -- along with its 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.

Peripheral markets mostly showed losses, with Portugal's PSI 20 index down 0.4% to 5,407.32 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 1.7% to 7,868.40, with Banco Santander SA (SAN) off 2.6%. BBVA SA (BBVA) fell 2.4%.

Greek stocks stood out with a gain. The Athens Composite Index rose more than 2% to 840.92, trimming its weekly decline to 0.8%.

Mining stocks weighed on London. BHP Billiton PLC (BHP) fell 3.6%, Glencore Xstrata PLC tumbled 6.5% and Rio Tinto PLC (RIO) dropped 4.4%. The FTSE 100 index fell 0.7% to 6,375.52. 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 futures 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.

Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires

Glencore (PK) (USOTC:GLNCY)
Gráfico Histórico do Ativo
De Jun 2024 até Jul 2024 Click aqui para mais gráficos Glencore (PK).
Glencore (PK) (USOTC:GLNCY)
Gráfico Histórico do Ativo
De Jul 2023 até Jul 2024 Click aqui para mais gráficos Glencore (PK).