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Norway's DNB down after Q2 profit miss
UK's BP up on higher Q2 upstream production forecast
Gjensidige crowns STOXX after Q2 beat
STOXX 600 down 1%, though it clocks weekly gain
Updates after markets close
By Sukriti Gupta, Sanchayaita Roy and Shashwat Chauhan
July 11 (Reuters) - European shares closed lower on Friday, as losses in banks and healthcare stocks weighed at the end of a week marred by U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff announcements, with the European Union also awaiting a letter on levies from Trump.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index closed 1% lower, snapping a four-day win streak and clocking its biggest single-day decline in over three-months.
Germany's DAX and Britain's FTSE both came off their record high levels seen this week to fall 0.8% and 0.4%, respectively on Friday.
The EU to strike a comprehensive trade agreement with the U.S., including zero-for-zero tariffs on industrial goods, but months of difficult talks have led to the realization it will probably have to settle for an interim agreement and hope something better can be negotiated.
"We had expected it to be approved on Wednesday, so the longer this drags on, the more we worry that Trump isn't on board, and the EU could get hit with significantly higher tariffs yet again," TD Securities analysts said in a note.
HSBC estimates that a 10%-20% hike in import tariffs by the U.S. on regional goods could suppress the overall revenue of the FTSE Europe index by 1.2%-2.4% and the net income in the range 4.0%-6.0%.
Risk sentiment took a hit globally after Trump a 35% tariff rate on all imports from Canada from August 1 and floated a blanket 15% or 20% tariff rate on other countries, up from the current 10% baseline rate.
European banks were at the forefront of the selloff with a 1.8% fall. Norway's largest bank DNB lagged with an 8.8% slide after reporting an for the second quarter, hit by weaker than expected interest income and higher loan losses.
Health care stocks , which hold a weight of more than 12% on the STOXX, also saw heavy losses on Friday with Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk down 3.6%.
A rare bright spot was energy , with shares of BP up 3.4% after the British oil giant said its second quarter is set to be higher than previously forecast.
Despite Friday's losses, most European blue-chip bourses clocked weekly gains in excess of 1%. Automobiles and mining stocks were the top performing sectors in Europe this week and telecoms the worst.
Global investors have been on edge as Trump has broadened his trade war this week, setting new tariffs on a number of countries, along with a 50% tariff on .
In other single stock news, Gjensidige Forsikring rose 7.8% to a record high after the Norwegian insurer reported topline results for the second quarter.
(Reporting by Sukriti Gupta and Sanchayaita Roy in Bengaluru; Editing by Sonia Cheema, Vijay Kishore and Chris Reese)
((Sukriti.Gupta@thomsonreuters.com [Sukriti.Gupta@thomsonreuters.com];))