(Reuters) - European shares pulled back from near-record highs on Thursday, as U.S. President Donald Trump signed into law a bill backing protesters in Hong Kong, sparking doubts about the resolution to a prolonged tariff war between Washington and Beijing.
The law, which warns of sanctions against human rights violations in Asia's financial hub amid pro-democracy protests, drew a sharp rebuke from China for what it views as U.S. interference in an internal matter.
The diplomatic standoff threatens to derail negotiations on a trade truce between the world's top two economies. Investors had turned optimistic that at least a partial trade deal would be signed by the end of the year.
Shares of trade-sensitive auto parts makers (SXAP) and tech firms (SX8P) led declines on the pan-European STOXX 600 index. The benchmark index (STOXX) was down 0.3% by 0806 GMT.
In a bright spot, Virgin Money (LON:VM) UK Plc (L:VMUK) jumped 7.3% to the top of the STOXX 600 as traders reacted positively to provisions for the PPI mis-selling scandal which were within its previous expectations.
Focus now shifts to a raft of economic indicators, including euro zone consumer confidence data and preliminary November inflation figures from Germany, due later in the day.