European stock markets slid at the start of trading on Tuesday following a slump in Asia, with investors offloading shares on geopolitical tensions.
At the open, London's benchmark FTSE 100 index shed 0.8% to 6 988.75 points.
In the eurozone, Frankfurt's DAX 30 index tumbled 1.4% to 11 367.57 points and the Paris CAC 40 lost 1.2% to 4 991.91.
Frankfurt was dragged down additionally by a 7% plunge in the share price of chemicals and pharmaceuticals giant Bayer.
A San Francisco judge on Monday upheld a jury verdict that found Bayer-owned Monsanto liable for not warning a groundskeeper that its weed killer product Roundup might cause cancer.
Judge Suzanne Bolanos denied Monsanto's request for a new trial but cut the $289m damages award to $78m to comply with the law regarding how punitive damages awards must be calculated.
Bayer said it would appeal the latest ruling.
Asian stock markets meanwhile fell sharply on Tuesday as geopolitical risks pile up, from US tensions with Russia and Saudi Arabia, to trade issues and Italy's budget stand-off with the European Union.
Milan's FTSE MIB index was down about 0.8% in initial deals.
Wall Street closed mixed Monday as investors wait on company nings reports.
Jasper Lawler, head of research at London Capital Group, pointed to "nerves ahead of a slew of corporate earnings reports out this week from... Amazon and economic bellwether Caterpillar, in addition to rising geopolitical tensions" for keeping investors away from risky bets.
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